I typed a much longer post, but there's no putting lipstick on a pig. I knowingly bought a truck with a blown up engine. A project hole is a dangerous place...
This thread won't have anything earth shattering or exciting if you don't like shade-tree mechanic-ing. I didn't see any other cummins rebuild threads on the board and thought I'd share my progress, and potential embarrassment, as I work through this.
I've been looking for a skirted flatbed for one of my farm trucks and that's when I stumbled on clean one... the only problem was it was sitting on a 4x4 third-gen Ram single cab dually that had G56 6 speed and really, really loud and rattling/squeaking/knocking common rail Cummins.
Every farm kid in North America has been rebuilding these for 25 years right? What can go wrong? So, after some negotiating and a lot of enabling by a buddy - it's on the trailer.
I know this is going to require either a replacement engine or long block. I want to peek inside the beast before I decide - so in the shop the Catastrophe goes. I try not to focus on the 35's and yee yee rims; those will end up on some high-schooler's truck when I find the appropriate Alcoas.
I work in my shop on weekends and when I get done at the farm. I say that to say, I generally work alone - with the radio or TV on in the background, or with MrsCP out chatting; it's relaxation. I usually feel like I can single-handedly do whatever I set my mind to, however, there are parts of this project that will require help. Holy crap. That G56 six speed is a beast. I wish I'd borrowed my friends' transmission jack for working on truck tractors because this Harbor Freight jack wouldn't get near low enough. I had to recruit some help to get it out from under the truck.
I pay the help, and myself, well.
Phase 1 complete. We have exorcised the demon. The cab is sitting on 4x4s to shim it off the frame - Youtube came in large for pulling the engine.
If you are fortunate enough to work in a shop where you can install an overhead trolly hoist... do it. I hope to have a lift someday, but I would not trade anything for that chain hoist. The thought of swinging that big 6 on a roll around engine hoist gives me the willies.
Now that the engine is out we have to have some place to set it. There is as strong case of project creep taking root.
This thread won't have anything earth shattering or exciting if you don't like shade-tree mechanic-ing. I didn't see any other cummins rebuild threads on the board and thought I'd share my progress, and potential embarrassment, as I work through this.
I've been looking for a skirted flatbed for one of my farm trucks and that's when I stumbled on clean one... the only problem was it was sitting on a 4x4 third-gen Ram single cab dually that had G56 6 speed and really, really loud and rattling/squeaking/knocking common rail Cummins.
Every farm kid in North America has been rebuilding these for 25 years right? What can go wrong? So, after some negotiating and a lot of enabling by a buddy - it's on the trailer.
I know this is going to require either a replacement engine or long block. I want to peek inside the beast before I decide - so in the shop the Catastrophe goes. I try not to focus on the 35's and yee yee rims; those will end up on some high-schooler's truck when I find the appropriate Alcoas.
I work in my shop on weekends and when I get done at the farm. I say that to say, I generally work alone - with the radio or TV on in the background, or with MrsCP out chatting; it's relaxation. I usually feel like I can single-handedly do whatever I set my mind to, however, there are parts of this project that will require help. Holy crap. That G56 six speed is a beast. I wish I'd borrowed my friends' transmission jack for working on truck tractors because this Harbor Freight jack wouldn't get near low enough. I had to recruit some help to get it out from under the truck.
I pay the help, and myself, well.
Phase 1 complete. We have exorcised the demon. The cab is sitting on 4x4s to shim it off the frame - Youtube came in large for pulling the engine.
If you are fortunate enough to work in a shop where you can install an overhead trolly hoist... do it. I hope to have a lift someday, but I would not trade anything for that chain hoist. The thought of swinging that big 6 on a roll around engine hoist gives me the willies.
Now that the engine is out we have to have some place to set it. There is as strong case of project creep taking root.