Unfortunately not. Wasn’t my call.Deleting the AFM?
Unfortunately not. Wasn’t my call.Deleting the AFM?
Shame on you for not having 7/16" coarse in stockView attachment 234666View attachment 234667View attachment 234668
Replaced the Cadillac's 45 year old transmission mount with a closeout $2.46 DEA/Marmon mount from RA. Made in Korea, looked just fine until I went to install it and noticed that the cross member mounting stud threads looked... Off.
Sure enough, the original nut (M10-1.5 I'd guess) didn't fit. I made it to the in-town hardware store with 15 minutes to spare and grabbed the correct 7/16-14 locking flange nut for a whopping .56c
I actually found a couple of NOS mounts on eBay that were in the $30-$40 range, but I didn't like the idea of using a 40+ year old rubber part, NOS or otherwise. At least the DEA mount had S. Korea as it's COO, the Chinese and Indian made units (as I'm sure most of you know) range from barely passable to completely unusable.
yeah I think you got a bit much in that they Dakota.Concrete removal.. Think the truck is maxed outOnly 90 mile drive to dump. Now to cleanup. Going to dig down a bit and try to seal up the rock foundation a bit.
View attachment 230646
View attachment 230647
View attachment 234666View attachment 234667View attachment 234668
Replaced the Cadillac's 45 year old transmission mount with a closeout $2.46 DEA/Marmon mount from RA. Made in Korea, looked just fine until I went to install it and noticed that the cross member mounting stud threads looked... Off.
Sure enough, the original nut (M10-1.5 I'd guess) didn't fit. I made it to the in-town hardware store with 15 minutes to spare and grabbed the correct 7/16-14 locking flange nut for a whopping .56c
I actually found a couple of NOS mounts on eBay that were in the $30-$40 range, but I didn't like the idea of using a 40+ year old rubber part, NOS or otherwise. At least the DEA mount had S. Korea as it's COO, the Chinese and Indian made units (as I'm sure most of you know) range from barely passable to completely unusable.
Good ole TH400, Last of the real Cadillac's....The next year was a HT4100, A Old's 5.7L diesel, Or the infamous 4-6-8 368 as engine options.
More likely made by Gabriel. They've made AZ's shocks forever.The shocks were twin-tubes and by the looks of them are probably made by Monroe.
Yeah I was gonna respond to your first mention of this but wasn't positive on an '18 F150 so kept my mouth shut.I found the time. Coolant flush on the 2018 F150, and test drove it from the brake bleed/fluid swap yesterday. Brakes felt goodddddd.
Coolant choice was wild. Ford called for OAT orange in 2018 but switched to P-OAT (low phosphate) shortly after, either due to heater core clogging issues or European emission standards depending on who you read. (P-OAT is low phosphate from what I read). There’s a hybrid OAT somewhere in the middle.
The most specific formulations at Autozone provided OAT for 2011-2018 fords and Low-phosphate OAT for 2001-2010 fords. There was nothing in a bottle than aligned with the ford bulletin for the fluid change or 2019+.
I thought I had it all figured out until I got to Autozone. The clerk on duty asked if he could help after I’d been back there for a bit. Dude was awesome. “I wish more customers cared. Here’s a printout from our system - according to our computer, you can go with either one, but I’d get as much of the old stuff out as you can. I’ll say this, most folks just buy anything here that is remotely close or universal and we haven’t had any complaints.” His printouts gave chemistry info that the bottles didn’t have, namely that the earlier 01-‘10 formulation was low-phosphate OAT, which is what ford wants now. I would have preferred a jug of motorcraft to be certain, but the bottle in my hand met both the ASTM specs that ford lists. Also, the 01-‘10 color was “yellow” which matches Ford’s claim that new fluid is “yellow.”
What’s wild is of the 12 variants of coolant there, I’d bet that half of them would work if a full flush was performed. Drained once, refilled with pure water and drained twice, then poured in a 3/4 mix of coolant. (You can only get about half the stuff out per drain, with a little help from shop air).
Ford did a good job of getting high-point vents to the overflow bottle. Aside from selection nerddom, the procedure was easy enough. Knock on wood, I hope the truck is good for a while.
Next issue - AZ doesn’t accept used antifreeze back. Oops. I know city sewer does, but I’m on septic… not dumping that in our septic system. All said and done, I have 6 gallons of fluid to recycle properly. Somewhere.
Yeah I was gonna respond to your first mention of this but wasn't positive on an '18 F150 so kept my mouth shut.
Still, for Ford trucks I follow the crude rule of thumb of G05 (HOAT) starting in '03, Dexcool (OAT) in '11 and the "gold" in '17.
Regardless, the Gold is supposed to be backward compatible so just do that if in doubt.
FTM seems to really, really like the Gold, which I find curious only because it begs the question of how ANY vehicle survived Dexcool if Gold is Sooo mUCh BeTTa!!!! I'm all for a better product but I think sometimes human nature is to view technology we used LITERALLY yesterday as "sooooooo yesterday" (best said in a Valley Girl voice) the SECOND a new thing is released. Anyway.....
Years ago I stopped looking at the big parts houses for guidance on coolants. Their listings and suggestions here are ambiguous at best, partially because they figure they can always take the easy out of AMAM
The past few weeks, All the header boards installed and some 45 degree braces.
I put two 4x6x16s in the center, poking out about 3-4 feet on each end. I will want to hang things, or use it for hoisting. Started on rafters with hurricane ties this morning. It was oppressively hot and humid.
View attachment 233585
That's good to know. I've used both and I prefer Gabriel Ultra's over Monroe for inexpensive options by a long shot. I put them on a 2007 Rav4 for my daughter some years ago and I was impressed with them too. I imagine these will outlast his vehicle. It is on borrowed time the way it is now; it has a rear main seal leak, but it just keeps chugging along. The main seal leak finally destroyed his starter a couple of months ago. "Duralasted" that part too. He'd be in a lot worse financial shape if he didn't work there with this car, lol. He has two more semesters then should be able to get a good enough paying job to upgrade a little bit. I'm hoping it makes it for him. I was never a big Nissan car fan, but this thing has impressed me for the abuse/neglect it has taken. Their trucks are obviously better than their cars. It does have it's quirks and frustrating aspects from a DIY'er perspective though; but all brands do to some extent.More likely made by Gabriel. They've made AZ's shocks forever.
I just got done installing the second pair of Gabriel Ultra Truck shocks on our '02 Grand Cherokee (originals had 175K+) and I've been very happy with them. I do tow a small 4x8 trailer that occasionally gets loaded to ~1700 lbs and the Gabriel's have no issue keeping the rear end feeling stable.
Overall, for the cost, I'm very pleased with the performance I've seen out of the Gabe's.