Truckers, lets see your rigs!

Made a purchase today... Guess this will be the new farm truck ish
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67 925 BC3/13.


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I love short hoods and 36" bunks! Looks pretty good!

What suspension? What's the interior like?


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Someone swapped international air ride on. It's done right and in good condition so it's going to stay. Interior isn't bad. Floor needs closed up a bit nicer from where the sticks were pulled at some point.



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We like short hoods and bunks too
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Sent from my flashscan v2
 
Someone swapped international air ride on. It's done right and in good condition so it's going to stay. Interior isn't bad. Floor needs closed up a bit nicer from where the sticks were pulled at some point.



ee74fe00444f30bdff0acf2e1b148749.jpg


We like short hoods and bunks too
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Sent from my flashscan v2


Yes!!!
 
This is my new rig for the farm. 09 Kenworth T660 with an Ism and a 2016 Wilson Pacesetter. I spent 2 and a half days polishing on the truck
 

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Someone swapped international air ride on. It's done right and in good condition so it's going to stay. Interior isn't bad. Floor needs closed up a bit nicer from where the sticks were pulled at some point.



ee74fe00444f30bdff0acf2e1b148749.jpg


We like short hoods and bunks too
b71dfd8923bd3798f4ba709df85a505c.jpg




Sent from my flashscan v2

Looks like someone did some updating, I would have thought that 67 would have had the tachograph in it. I bet it rides like a baby buggy.

The B models are starting to grow on me, always thought they were kind of an odd duck compared to the A model or L model.
 
Another one for the KWs!

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I've always loved the A models, they'll always be my most favorite!

But I do also love me some B models. The biggest down side to a B model is to someone that isn't into trucks doesn't know the classic Bs compared to the newer Bs.


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OEM's don't give a damn. They're after the "Lowest cost of ownership" on paper. If they tell you you can run it 100k before oil changes the odds are in their favor it will make it out of warranty before you see parts failures. The pencil pushers in the office at a fleet will do the math and figure what that would save in the life they will own that truck and jump all over it. However after the warranty is up and you see what those long intervals have done to parts what have you saved? If your a big fleet and buy 500 trucks and only keep them for 400k miles then by all means run it 50k. But the next guy that buys it or the owner operator that keeps truck 1mil is going to pay for that decision.

I've heard of big fleets here changing oil until they get 300k and never changing it again. They might run them 100k more and never once pull the plug.

Oil samples are like a fat guy getting on the scales. If it comes back with high copper content what are you going to do about it? If the answer is "probably nothing" then what was the point? In the big picture of owning a truck the cost of an oil change is trivial. Would do most of these guys good to crawl under it once in a while and see what is going on. Most guys spend more time at the buffet than on a creeper.:hehe:
I've done the math many times because I get tire of people claiming oil is a cheap overhaul, it's not. Oil changes on big trucks are expensive. Why throw away good oil? If you plan to keep the truck and overhaul it anyways then you wasted a lot of money. The difference in the 250hr oil change versus 1500hr on an older engine that would run to 25,000hrs, with $150 oil change costs is over $12,000.

Again if you will keep the truck and overhaul it anyways, why is a million miles the mark to hit? You probably won't be running it long enough after overhaul to come close to wearing it out. Even if extended drains were causing slightly increased wear, and you overhaul 100k sooner what's the big deal if your cost of ownership is lower. Done right, you shouldn't have higher wear anyways.

Now if you are planning on selling the truck at 950k and it has to make it there without and overhaul, are you getting that extra 12k worth out of it? What if you decided to sell it at 850k instead? Lower miles gets a slightly higher price and you have a lot less in maintenance invested.

I'm not trying to be a pencil pusher, but some people seem to get emotional about oil changes and engine life and ignore the numbers which really do matter regardless of if you have one truck or one hundred.

If you are only looking at wear metals on a UOA your throwing your money away getting one done in the first place because like you said, there's nothing you are going to do about it. TBN and even better would be TBN versus TAN, is the number that is most valuable on there. Simply put, it's telling you how much life is left in the oil. Plain and simple. Looking at silicon can show a leak in the air intake, bad air filter or an oil filter that is maxed out for that drain interval. You may need a different filter, an extended service one or it just may need to be changed before the oil. Fuel dilution is another helpful tool as is being able to see traces of coolant. The actual wear metals I never really care about, they can be misleading and they can scare people into tearing things apart for no reason.

Without a UOA you can't know what's going on with your oil, but a UOA is only as good as the person taking the sample and the person interpreting the results. It's also just an added cost if you never do anything with the info.

The oils are made for long drains, the engines are made for long drains, put it to work for you. The 10-15k truck oil change is like the 100-250hr tractor oil change or 3k mile car oil change. Long gone, even though many won't move on.

More and more OEMs for off road equipment are moving to scheduled sampling instead of scheduled service. You pull your sample, send it in and they tell you what to do. They don't even print a general recommendation in enough of the books anymore, everything is analysis based. The larger the equipment is the more common this is.

Delo has a lot of info on extended drains and what their test fleet engines look like after running them for long time periods. Yes it's promo material in a way so it's biased, but why would an oil company want you to buy LESS of their product? They aren't promoting a premium product over their base product, their doing this with their whopping $10/gallon oil. Why would they encourage long drains when they have a guarantee /progressive damage warranty? Maybe they deny every claim, maybe nobody knows about it, maybe nobody has ever needed to collect on it. I dk.

One thing no amount of data, numbers, science, and hard facts can overrule is a person's emotions. If at the end of the day it still helps them sleep at night to change early then go right ahead.


I do find it interesting the number of people that boast about their short OCIs yet don't have a clue what their coolant is doing. Must get too focused on the oil, but ignoring the coolant can wreck the motor just as fast as anything. Using the wrong coolant, not testing it properly and fully, not testing it to begin with, using the wrong additives, or even just adding additives without testing for some reason. I don't know the number of times I've run into people running OAT ELCs and they are still running coolant filters full of SCAs just because. I'm not criticizing anyone when it comes to coolant, it's a nightmare to understand, but it's not impossible and a little research in the right place goes a long way, but if you never step out of the bubble you never know. The worst is the people just running fully formulated automotive coolant.


To each their own. I don't like changing things all the time especially before it's needed. I don't replace tires at half tread why replace the oil at half life? I'm not out buying expensive oil and bypass filtration systems with the hope of running 250k on an oil change, just wanting to get the most out of a dollar and not spend my days changing oil for no reason when I could be doing better things.

That's just my opinion though.
 
Long winded bastage.
Truth though.

The only scenario I have seen that contradicts this is a fleet that spun main bearings within about a month of one another. The combination of that one engine platform combined with extended oil changes has had a poor result, but with anything, there is always more to the story.

I have pulled down two engines in the last year running green (ethylene glycol? ) coolant with sca filtration. Neither showed any sign of cavitation. Nearly all of the tear downs running deac or elc have signs of erosion. Those two only had some scale.
 
A guy I used to work for bought 4 new peterbilts back in 2006, 2007 model 379's with identical specs and ISX565 engines, two had oil changes at 30k and two had oil changes at 15k. I'll give you one guess which two engines lasted longer with fewer issues.
 
The two that had 30k intervals started using excessive amounts of oil right around 750k, of the other two, one made it to 950k and was just starting to use more oil than normal, the other one was overhauled at 900k and only needed it because a turbo failed and blew its guts into the engine, it was healthy otherwise
 
All I'm going to say is it's easy to tell who went to diesel tech school or works at a dealer shop. 10yrs ago I might have believed the same thing but seeing an average of 2-3 overhauls a month you can tell with about 90% accuracy who used green coolant and who extended their service intervals. High mileage guys cranks are at the shop being polished, and cam's are trashed. Green coolant guys have pitted liners and block erosion.

Right or wrong when you have guys that have been in the trucking business since the 40's/50's and have great engine life doing things a certain way. Telling them they MAY save some money by doubling their service intervals because a mega fleet is doing it your probably going to be laughed at. I'm not saying your wrong, I'm sure it does work for some applications, and I like to gamble but I'll do mine in Vegas. At least there I get free cocktails and a good view.
 
The way all big cam engines should have looked in 87.
No, that's the way ALL engines should look......mounted out IN FRONT of the firewall, not under it! These IH and Volvo and new FL mechanics would have a aneurism when they see they could hold a dance party between the head and firewall on an older Classic/W9/379. LOL

I had to pull a valve cover on an Acert in a W9 while pumping fuel to fix a broken wire. Try that with a Prostar.
 
All I'm going to say is it's easy to tell who went to diesel tech school or works at a dealer shop. 10yrs ago I might have believed the same thing but seeing an average of 2-3 overhauls a month you can tell with about 90% accuracy who used green coolant and who extended their service intervals. High mileage guys cranks are at the shop being polished, and cam's are trashed. Green coolant guys have pitted liners and block erosion.

Right or wrong when you have guys that have been in the trucking business since the 40's/50's and have great engine life doing things a certain way. Telling them they MAY save some money by doubling their service intervals because a mega fleet is doing it your probably going to be laughed at. I'm not saying your wrong, I'm sure it does work for some applications, and I like to gamble but I'll do mine in Vegas. At least there I get free cocktails and a good view.


That's not true. Your sales people will say that. Your mechanics know the difference and all suggest doing **** right. Just because it's preached at a sales level doesn't mean people are dumb to doing things right. 90 percent of guys will tell you exactly what problems are
 
No, that's the way ALL engines should look......mounted out IN FRONT of the firewall, not under it! These IH and Volvo and new FL mechanics would have a aneurism when they see they could hold a dance party between the head and firewall on an older Classic/W9/379. LOL

I had to pull a valve cover on an Acert in a W9 while pumping fuel to fix a broken wire. Try that with a Prostar.


When an RO said Freightliner and there was no model listed, a 132 was the sweetest sight ever lol


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