It is a shame that a top tier truck company would sell trucks with litterally a rats nest wiring harness under the dash of their cabover trucks. Compare to a Pete or Freightliner from the same era, the difference is day and night.
1980 K100 Cabover Project/daily runner
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by Adisiwaya, Mar 25, 2017.
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51.50 i cant tell if that's sarcastic or not? Lol i don't quite understand the fuse relay system in this one. Fuse/relay panel with fuse switches and other fuses on top of the switches with the names of what they are for...
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I am not being sarcastic. I am speaking from experience. I was a fleet mechanic for Kooyman Trucking, house carrier for U S Steel Pittsburg. We had over 70 Freightliners, two K100 s, two 4070's and three Peterbilts. Every electrical problem with the KW's was compounded by the absolute rats nest of wiring under the dash. I repeat, look at the wiring harness of a Peterbilt or Freightliner of the same era before making further comment. Thank You
Adisiwaya Thanks this. -
- Make sure to grease all the zerks in the shifter linkage, some are hard to find and have usually been over-looked for years, to the point of having a wild shifter.
- When changing the oil, punch a hole in the bottom of the filter first and let it drain out before removing.
- When greasing the kingpins, jack up the axle to relieve the pressure, then grease it.
- When removing the wheels, loosen all the lug nuts just a little bit first, then roll a little bit to break them loose, thus saving you from having to beat them off with a sledge.
- When flushing the coolant/radiator, replace with distilled water/anti-freeze mix, and don't forget to change the coolant filter, keeps the little nasty's (minerals) from hammering through your cylinder sleeves.
1951 ford, Oxbow, DDlighttruck and 4 others Thank this. -
Times 2 @clausland said. I still have my K100. Keep that shifter tower grease. Also what @51.50 said about the rats nest under the dash, so true. But I figured mine out after having it so long. I'm sure if I was to go inside it now, it would literally be a rats nest from being parked a few years.
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spyder7723, Oxbow, clausland and 2 others Thank this.
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Oxbow and Diesel Dave Thank this.
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