A while back, I changed out the starter in the 1989 Ford F-150 (which came with the name “The Marshal”) that David gave me, and it seemed just fine. I mean, it started and that’s really the most we can ask from a starter, isn’t it? Unfortunately, though, while returning from a day of canoeing with my kid, I stalled it while backing into my driveway, and somehow in the process of trying to start it again, I managed to break five teeth off the flywheel. Crap. I haven’t been using the truck as much since then, but I did yesterday, and, dammit, it felt good.
I’m appalled to realize that the teeth-breaking incident happened last July, but if I think about it, I’m not too shocked the truck has been mostly sitting. I mean, about four or so months after the Flywheel Incident, I had a pretty significant mechanical problem of my own, when my main hose from my heart tore apart. That definitely slowed down my truck usage for a good while, and then after that I just got swamped with other cars and work and all the detritus of life that the truck ended up sitting for much longer than I’d have liked.
I’d pulled it out a few times, but I think it’d been sitting for at least like four months in this current stretch. I would have driven it more, but I know every time I start it, it’s sort of a gamble if I’ll be able to start it again, easily, because of those missing flywheel teeth.
I mean, I keep a big wrench in the car so I can just turn the engine if the starter ends up in the gap, but that’s a pain. Then again, the odds are in my favor. In fact, let’s calculate them!
I have the legendarily-robust 300 cubic inch (4.9 liter) inline-six engine, which means I have a 164-tooth flywheel. If we take away five teeth from the flywheel, that leaves us with 159 teeth still, so that means I still have 96.9512195% – let’s call it 97% – of the flywheel teeth! So, really, there’s only a 3% chance that the starter will be in the wrong place! Those are pretty damn good odds!
I mean, sure, I should replace that flywheel soon, but I think it’s an acceptable level of risk, starting-wise.
I charged the battery up the night before, then went out to the leaf-strewn part of the driveway where the Marshal sat, patiently. Inside the cab, I was disheartened and annoyed to find some mold or mildew or whatever attempting to colonize the vinyl bench seat. I licked off all that I could, savoring the smoky, earthy, loamy flavors of the fungus (I kid! I wiped it with a rag, jeez) and set to starting the truck.
I had to fight all of my carbureted-car instincts, and just pressed the throttle to the floor once, then let go, as this ’89 F-150 is fuel injected. I twisted the key, was relieved to hear the starter actually engage the flywheel with a few of those 159 remaining teeth, and the engine spun and growled and groaned, slowly being shaken awoke from its coma, but then spluttered and coughed itself into wakefulness.
Good truck.
I revved it a bit to blow out any nesting voles or whatever, then shoved it into reverse. The wheels didn’t want to move at first, having been sitting so long. I put it in the ultra-low first gear and lurched forward, then back into reverse, rocking it back and forth a few times to let those axles know I mean business, and soon they relented, and out of the driveway we rolled.
I drove it Italian Tune-Up style for a bit, with the likely idiotic idea that I could blow away months of stagnation with enthusiasm, but it did sort of work, The brakes needed a bit of loosening up, but after a few wheel-locking, skidding stops, the system seemed to resign itself that it would be going back to work, and the braking calmed down to normal levels.
All in all, the perfect time to load a ton of rocks in the thing, right?
See, the thing that got me off my ass was that my next-door neighbors needed to get a literal ton of gravel and pavers for a backyard project, and it was either have me help them with the use of the truck or they would make, as I was told, “two trips” in their Tesla Model Y, which seemed like a pretty bad idea. Messy, too. I don’t think that Model Y would have been happy with 1,000 pounds of loose gravel in the back.
There’s something satisfying about that first drive in a freshly-awoken car or truck. You can feel the car waking up, the parts shaking off the dirt and grime of disuse and remembering what they were made for. In the half-hour drive to the quarry, I could feel the truck waking back up, and to its credit, the engine felt great, and ran smoother than I remembered. It even shifted with relative ease. It felt good to have the old crusty boy back.
While still pretty filthy and leaf-covered, the Marshal still maintains a certain amount of workhorse dignity; I’ve discussed this in detail before, how a worn and battered old truck somehow isn’t embarrassing the way a sedan of the same vintage and in the same condition would be. A 1989 Ford Taurus with the same brushed-on purple paint and the same level of grime and wear would suggest an owner that hasn’t made a good decision in decades; but on a truck? It just looks like it’s owned by someone who likes to do things.
I’m not saying it’s fair, but that is how it is.
Anyway, it just felt good to be driving that thing again. And it felt good to put it to real use. Watching the guy in the bucket-bulldozer dump about a half-ton of gravel into the bed was satisfying.
The gravel looked a lot like Grape-Nuts, and had about as much flavor and perhaps a better mouth feel. And I like Grape-Nuts.
From a distance, it looks like it could be corn, too. Maybe deer corn, which I see advertised all over the place, and may have rolled around in piles of, but never have eaten, not being a deer, or at least never having been invited to lunch by a deer.
Then, we loaded in 1,020 pounds of whatever mineral these flat paving stones are, and, as always, I’m amazed how little room a full ton of rocks takes up in the bed of a truck:
This was actually a bit over a ton, about 2,100 pounds or so, and it never seems to take up as much room as you’d expect. But rocks are dense! Dense and heavy. I think if I filled ip that whole bed with similar rocks and gravel, it would weigh about 6,000 pounds or so? Three tons? Something like that.
On the drive back I could definitely feel the weight back there; the way it handled felt more like driving my old Beetle than the truck normally does, as I think the weight bias had migrated very rearward. The old F-150 handled it great, though, accelerating not really all that worse than when empty, and stopping just fine, though I was a lot more careful with how much room I accounted for when slowing down.
I realize that nothing that I did here is a big deal. I got a truck that had been sitting a bit started, and then took it to a place, and then had a ton of rock dumped into it, and took it back. That’s it! An errand, basically, if a heavy one. And yet it felt great to do it, in some peculiar and basic way, the joy that comes from using a tool in the way it was intended. It’s really not all that different than using an X-acto knife to make a really straight cut in a piece of mat board, or the way it feels when you draw just the right line with a really nice Rapidograph pen, or lay a nice bead while welding.
I promised the Marshal that I’d be better about driving it more regularly, and not letting it sit for months. I hope I keep that promise. Though a perverse part of me does kind of wish I saw 1,000 pounds of gravel in the back of that Model Y.
Why Society Has Deemed A Crappy Truck Cooler Than A Crappy Car
My Extremely Reliable 1989 Ford F-150 Had Another Problem And It Involves Broken Teeth
The Marshal To The Rescue: Cold Start
You can get a brand new flywheel for less than a hundred bucks and since you’re in there you can add a brand new clutch also for less than hundred bucks. So for less than a couple hundy at RockAuto you’re good for another 150K miles easy with that 300 I6. Treat ol’ Marshall right
If he’s gonna throw a new clutch in while he’s in there anyway, Torch should teach Otto to drive stick on it first. Not that there’s a huge chance of damaging a 300 six with granny first, it won’t need much in the way of revving and is probably all but unstallable.
My taekwondo school has a 20-ish year old GMC mini bus that we occasionally use. A few months ago my instructor asked me to go make sure it would start. I doubt that anyone had even stepped into it for quite some time, but being on old GM truck it fired right up and ran like a champ. There was an odd “whomp” noise when it cranked but the engine purred nicely after that. Whatever. I let it run for a while to charge the battery and hopped out.
Odd things can happen to a vehicle when it sits for months at a time. I started to walk back inside and I noticed clumps of grass and feathers spreading in a pattern behind the bus. Included in this debris field were four intact but very concerned looking young birds. That “whomp” noise was the sound of their nest being shot out of the tailpipe. I put the nest back together as best I could and got the birds situated in a large shrub close to the bus. I saw an adult bird hanging around that shrub when I left the school a few hours later, but I don’t know what happened to them afterwards. Hopefully they survived and get to tell all of their bird buddies about that time their house exploded.
I made probably a dozen trips in my truck from the local rock yard to my old house in Portland while we were landscaping the front. Half a yard of gravel weighed in a 1400 pounds, and that’s as much weight as I was comfortable putting in. I sat in the truck while they were loading it, and the gradual sag of the springs as they took the weight was very satisfying.
The retaining wall stones were a bit more scary; also loaded with a bucket loader, also from about three feet up, nowhere near as gentle of a process. The dents in the bed floor from that particular ordeal are impressive.
Mmm. Trucky goodness. A long time ago I had a ratty 1952 GMC with a dump bed. Some previous owner had fabbed up dual exhaust headers for the straight six, with three cylinders each dumping into dual cherry bomb mufflers. It was slow but sounded fabulous.
We named the old boy “Brutus.” It saw light truck duty hauling stuff for me, and heavy play duty for my very young kids at the time. My daughter Anna used to tuck flowers in the grille, like Ferdinand the Bull.
Sadly had to sell it when I changed careers and moved out of state. Sniffle.
Little bit more (and some pix) here… https://itisgood.org/auto-biography/#52GMC
What a fun read. The Autopian should hire you!
No hire the previous owner
Thx! Once upon a time (mid ‘90s) I was a freelance writer and photographer specializing in antique cars. Published several dozen articles in a variety of magazines. Then we had our first child, and I had to find a steadier paycheck. Miss that gig still. No way I could keep up with the output demanded by these sites today though. Hats off to Jason, David & the crew.
When you get the flywheel off, you can replace just the ring gear by heating the gear with an acetylene torch until it expands and falls off. Then heat the new one until it drops on and let it cool. It’s one of those procedures that is amazing in its simplicity, kind of like seating a bead with ether.
i do have an acetylene torch!
You do?? Where was Torch’s torch during the ChangLi battery situation? 🙂
The thought of Torch running around with a torch makes me kind of glad that I live on the opposite side of the country.
yeah – this sounds like Darwin award quality bad idea. Just buy the damn flywheel.
You also have a Tracy. I’m just saying…
But is that any safer?
I believe that ownership has now been transferred
Among the more valuable lessons I learned in grad school is never to offer to help a geologist move. It ends up being mostly boxes of rocks and boxes of books about rocks.
In my case, also car parts, but that really doesn’t help matters.
Being married to a geologist, can confirm.
I bet marrying a geologist rocks.
Good call using the truck. This reminds me of the time my sister and one of her old boyfriends decided to put about 1000-1500 lbs. of pavers and bagged sand in the back of our 2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee.
They managed to permanently lower the rear of the vehicle (about 2-3”) with plastic deformation of some component(s) in the suspension.
Poor old jeep never drove right after that, but it did continue for another 75k before the transfer case blew up around 220K.
So what you’re saying is the Jeep was bagged and lowered.
Bagged, bricked and lowered one might say.
When I was too young to know better, I put 8000 pounds of broken concrete in the bed of a 6 cylinder 1/2 ton Chevy. With the pedal floored, it would just barely move. The engine seized on the way back from the landfill.
I thought Jeeps were to be jacked not lowered?
She accidentally invented the Carolina squat before it was cool
3 things:
1 – You’re right. It does feel good to do truck things with a truck. Well done, Marshal!
2 – The crankshaft tends to stop near the top of a compression stroke. Given that you have 6 cylinders (aligned in pairs), the flywheel has 3 particular spots where it likes to stop. One of which is quite likely the one with missing teeth. So your odds of hitting the bad spot are closer to 33% than 3%, unfortunately.
3 – Can we have an update on the van? Is it still amazing? Did DT swap the timing belt yet?
Came to say the same thing, that there are 3 spots it will naturally stop in.
That’s a proper truck doing proper truck things.
And glad to hear you are OK, I totally missed that this had happened to you!
A good read on the exploding heart plumbing episode.
Worth the search to do so.
Proper truck doing proper truck things needs proper truck operator sound proper truck operator things.
When she was young, I used to take my Mustang to the track and I remember how on the way home, she’d feel completely loose and supremely capable. All the daily creaks and rattles would be gone, she’d respond effortlessly to the smallest touch of the throttle, and she just generally seemed dialed in to the experience of driving.
I loved that feeling as much as I did the time I’d spent racing; there’s just something wonderful about when your vehicle, whatever it is, gets to do what it was born to do.
This is my favorite vehicle in your fleet. Enjoy it. Nothing better than that 300, flywheel issues or not.
I very much understand this satisfaction. Good to see Marshal back in business.
“It’s really not all that different than using an X-acto knife to make a really straight cut in a piece of mat board, or the way it feels when you draw just the right line with a really nice Rapidograph pen”
Ah, our years in a studio.
Good for you. It’s nice for everyone to play farmer every now and then and get your hands and pants dirty…well at least dirty from grabbing the steering wheel and front seats.
Of course, the real work starts with the rock REMOVAL for your neighbor. That’s when you head into your house to make yourself lunch. You’ll get your truck back in about 4 hours.
I discovered dump trailers at the local equipment rental place, and they’re a game changer for getting a load of gravel or bark dust. Just back it up, and use the hydraulic pump to dump it.
Meh. I have a tarp based unloader. Rated up to a ton and you just crank the handle to dump it off the tailgate. Saves the trailer hassle and some money.
I’m a big fan of my Loadhandler the best way to unload bulk material. It works great for dispensing it evenly too.
To me this is the real allure of kei trucks. You can buy one with a dump bed, or at least a bed where the sides go down. A lot more functional than the typical F150 bed, especially when they are usually only 5.5′ long these days.
Obviously not going to use it for a ton of rocks, but I’d fill it up with mulch every year and just drive into my backyard and dump it where I want it.
You could get a tilt bed on that, but no one wanted to add like 5k to a truck that 15k would buy. Much different story applied to a kei truck.
‘“two trips” in their Tesla Model Y …’ Ha! First trip to pick up some gravel, second trip to pick up a new Tesla.
I imagine, as far as deer are concerned, you rank right up there with Natty Bumppo. Wouldn’t be looking for any invites soon.
As someone who did projects in a Saturn Vue for a decade and then finally got a Colorado a year ago this hits me just right. Trucks doing truck stuff is like scratching an itch.
I have driven the beige unicorn with the 8 foot bed completely filled with dirt a few times. It’s hilarious how much lower it rides when full, but still copes with everything well. Trucks doing truck stuff is the best truckin time.
Keep on Truckin
That would have been something to see – and fairly train-wreckian, I suspect.
A Bobcat feeding a chute into the back of the car would have been hilarious.
I had a 1985 Nissan pickup truck, that I always wished I had waited a year later to buy because the Hard Body version looked so much cooler.
I bought a bunch of paving blocks to widen the driveway on a home I bought new. I think they weighed about 1800 pounds and the Nissan’s rear suspension spent most of the 15 mile drive home on its stops or just above them. Meanwhile, the steering felt very light and weird.
I managed to make it home and the Nissan seemed no worse for the wear.
I went to get about a half ton of gravel for my step-father in the ’95 Nissan truck I had.the guy loaded it with the big loader. The lady at the scales was amazed at the 2700 pounds I came out with.
Uh… Wow. I can envision a permanently bent frame, exploded shock absorbers and completely annihilated suspension bump stops.
My brother had a Toyota of the same era and it was as hard to kill as the boys on Top Gear made it out to be.
I no longer need a truck to do things like that, but I miss these honest little guys that so often over-performed.
And during my time in Texas, I grew to hate the polished big pickups that never got dirty but always blinded me at night in the oncoming lane.
Didn’t bother it a bit. Still sat level.
Those era Toyota Hiluxes were prone to rust, but had no piston cracking issues or DPF problems of the Hiluxes today…
Guy did that with my brat, big loader bucket was way bigger than my truck. He did art with it, and didn’t trash the already trashed paint.
Subaru BRAT? This whole conversation reminds me of seeing what people in SE Asia do with scooters and Honda Cubs.
Every once in a while, we did things we shouldn’t have done to these little trucks. Perhaps there are forums somewhere, where some guy puts 5,000 pounds of something in the back of his full-sized F/C/GMC/DRam truck. But I haven’t seen it.
Brat was measured at 2k lbs on a supposed wagon chassis. So the 600lbs I could fit w the seats was well below it’s rating. Mind sticking to city w/o highway was super nice.
This is why I keep my ’96 Sonoma around even though I don’t really “need” it. An oil change a year and $30 a month in insurance is pretty cheap as long as I use it at least once a month. I used it last night to haul furniture for my fiancee.
’93 Ranger here. Doesn’t run well, but always runs! She is doing daily duty lately, though. I can’t find time to replace the broken strut in the Mustang!
Ditto my ’95 Land Rover Disco. Not a pickup, but will still hold HUGE amounts of stuff and pull anything you care to hitch up to it for when things won’t fit in it. It is pleasantly scruffy, but everything works properly.
Series 1 Discos are great workers — same basic, overbuilt chassis as the Range Rover and Defender, huge amount of space in the back with the seats folded up, opened up even more with the raised roofline. Basically as much cargo space as a minivan or a short-bed pickup with a tall cap.
They really are great – and for a fraction of the price of a Range Rover Classic, never mind the insanity that is Defender prices in the US. Mine has even been quite reliable. It’s a VERY rare in the US 5spd manual, no sunroofs, 5-seater. Spent most of it’s life in San Diego so no rust!
You certainly can’t buy another one for cheap unless you want something with a rust hole in the bed and is barely roadworthy. Add 4WD and it is still $5k.
I paid $3,000 for my Sonoma. The engine runs perfect at 202,000 miles, but leaks a little oil. The transmission slips in 2nd and 4th right now due to a worn out band, so I drive it in 1st and 3rd for now. I have all the parts to rebuild and upgrade the 4LSLIPPY, just haven’t made the time.
The 425 in my Olds was built when I was in college by a southwestern Virginia mechanic who very much fit the stereotypes. I once asked him about shocks and suspension travel and he made a huge story out of nothing (this was back in 1995, so I’m paraphrasing at this point):
Once I was driving that blue pickup down the road and I saw a pile of dirt and I thought “That’s good dirt.” So I pulled over, grabbed a shovel, and I was a-shovelin’ dirt and a’shovelin’ dirt, and a’shovelin’ dirt and before you know it the dang thing bottomed out on me. The lesson here is you need some clearance so I don’t recommend running your exhaust out the side.
He took a lot longer to tell it that it took me to type that paragraph. It was a pretty long story about how he saw good dirt and a’shoveled a bunch of it. Dude built a kick-ass engine and transmission for me, tho.
RCLB trucks are the truckiest trucks. Fight me.
Truth. I’ve had 2 RC/SB, and extended cab, a quad cab, and 2 RC/LB. There’s nothing like being able to haul plywood with the tailgate up, or all of the major appliances in one trip while moving, or a whole little league team in a small town parade, or two pallets of food for a charity… long beds are the best, even mini longbeds like my Sonoma with a 7-foot bed (I’d rather have it than a half-ton with a 5 or 6 footer).
You might get invited to a deer luncheon if you stopped driving into their kinfolk.
“I was just standing there, minding my own business, and PAO!!”
Bambi, are you hurt?
No, but I’m not O-Kei.
D’oe!!
Oh deer.
Oh well, sorry to hear of the rocky relationship that you have with your neighbors! 😉
Seriously, that was a very nice gesture on your part!