Due to mechanical problems caused by too much rust, I have not driven the 86 W250 since May of 2010, and it may have not had fresh gas in it at that time.
I have been driving my son's F350 4X4 Powerstroke with Hiniker 8' blade for snowplowing and have let the Dodge sit for lack of desire to crawl under it in these cold winter conditions of Minnesota. But I did move it into the unheated barn and laid carpet scraps under it to make life somewhat more bearable. The F350 is a fine truck, but I can't see for crap out of the crew cab when I back up, so all the backing is done by watching the mirrors and hoping I didn't miss something. Thus I have been plowing our ~30 accounts in approx twice the time I could do them with my 25 year old Dodge. So the Dodge has to come back to life!!
So during this past week, I have been working on the rusty broken tranny cooler lines, the rusted through P.S. lines, dropping the tranny pan for a filter and band adjustment, and raising up the 30+ gallon plastic gas tank that had fallen due to the steel straps rusting through. Son and I replaced the vacuum type fuel pump yesterday. By pouring some new gas down the carb throat and giving it a sniff of ether, we got it to run and it might run nicely (including idle) for about 5 minutes, or maybe only 1 minute. The 360 4bbl engine sounded good, with no lifter clicking or any other bad sounds. But it seemed to pull a slug of water from the tank and send it up to the carb, and it would just die. More gas from the pour can and a few more sniffs of ether and it would run again. I determined that the gas had the water content (drawn in by the ethanol) by putting a vacuum directly to the fuel line feeding the fuel pump and pulling a sample of watery clear stuff into a can. My son did not believe it was water, so I took the can out onto the gravel drive and put a paper towel into the liquid and lit it with a Burnz torch. It did not poof, but finally caught fire and burned with a lazy smoky fire like the kerosene road lanterns of the 1940's. Proof of bad gas!!
So now I want to put a drain plug into the bottom of the plastic gas tank so I can drain it when this problem happens. My old IH trucks of the 60's had drain plugs in the steel gas tanks. I am picturing something like a brass fitting that has very tall OD threads that can be threaded directly into the plastic and has a ID thread for a brass plug. I do not want to drop the tank to install this, and the tank may have between 5 and 10 gallons of crappy gas in it now.
I can't run the truck the way it is now, it would be totally unreliable, and probably never even get to the first plowing job.
Any suggestions short of a quarter stick of TNT? I would siphon the tank through the fill tube, but I can not believe I could get all the water out of the bottom of the long tank. Has anyone put a drain plug into one of these plastic tanks?
Thanks for your thoughts!!
Paul in MN
I have been driving my son's F350 4X4 Powerstroke with Hiniker 8' blade for snowplowing and have let the Dodge sit for lack of desire to crawl under it in these cold winter conditions of Minnesota. But I did move it into the unheated barn and laid carpet scraps under it to make life somewhat more bearable. The F350 is a fine truck, but I can't see for crap out of the crew cab when I back up, so all the backing is done by watching the mirrors and hoping I didn't miss something. Thus I have been plowing our ~30 accounts in approx twice the time I could do them with my 25 year old Dodge. So the Dodge has to come back to life!!
So during this past week, I have been working on the rusty broken tranny cooler lines, the rusted through P.S. lines, dropping the tranny pan for a filter and band adjustment, and raising up the 30+ gallon plastic gas tank that had fallen due to the steel straps rusting through. Son and I replaced the vacuum type fuel pump yesterday. By pouring some new gas down the carb throat and giving it a sniff of ether, we got it to run and it might run nicely (including idle) for about 5 minutes, or maybe only 1 minute. The 360 4bbl engine sounded good, with no lifter clicking or any other bad sounds. But it seemed to pull a slug of water from the tank and send it up to the carb, and it would just die. More gas from the pour can and a few more sniffs of ether and it would run again. I determined that the gas had the water content (drawn in by the ethanol) by putting a vacuum directly to the fuel line feeding the fuel pump and pulling a sample of watery clear stuff into a can. My son did not believe it was water, so I took the can out onto the gravel drive and put a paper towel into the liquid and lit it with a Burnz torch. It did not poof, but finally caught fire and burned with a lazy smoky fire like the kerosene road lanterns of the 1940's. Proof of bad gas!!
So now I want to put a drain plug into the bottom of the plastic gas tank so I can drain it when this problem happens. My old IH trucks of the 60's had drain plugs in the steel gas tanks. I am picturing something like a brass fitting that has very tall OD threads that can be threaded directly into the plastic and has a ID thread for a brass plug. I do not want to drop the tank to install this, and the tank may have between 5 and 10 gallons of crappy gas in it now.
I can't run the truck the way it is now, it would be totally unreliable, and probably never even get to the first plowing job.
Any suggestions short of a quarter stick of TNT? I would siphon the tank through the fill tube, but I can not believe I could get all the water out of the bottom of the long tank. Has anyone put a drain plug into one of these plastic tanks?
Thanks for your thoughts!!
Paul in MN
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