Bought the old girl , got it home , oil pan gave me a 8 gallons of water , transfer case was the nasty of them all , trans had about 3 gallons below the oil , front and rear difs were not so bad , question how can I flush the trans and transfer case in place , or would a hot oil flush work , not...
Tried to buy this old girl 20 years ago , but fate comes around again , but a flash flood submerged the old girl , owner passed and now the kids want the money to go to their mom , i want to be fair, what type of value would you throw out on a 77 with a year of flood damage , pulled the stick...
selling my 80 HJ45 with Arkansas Title , H diesel 4 speed trans , I’m including a 78 disc front end , brakes are drum . Bed needs work on sides , diesel runs great
17,500 obo located in Hot Springs Ar
Ok thanks for the tow info , I only plan on empty payloads I run Duramax 3/4 tons on my business side , but I kinda feel the HJ45 might get me some more business as it’s a head turner for sure
I’m looking for options and feedback , I have the H diesel in my 45, I want to use it in my business and drive several hours on the interstate to the towns I work in in , i have the 4 speed in it , if you upgraded it what would be the ideal diesel upgrade , fuel mpg is not a factor,
hi all I’m trying to find where the flasher relay goes at on my 1980 HJ45, I have several wires on passenger firewall where heater should be , my starter relay is inside the cab Where on the wiring harness does the relay go , thanks
Ok thanks , this is a diesel tank and the cross support is what’s holding it from dropping , I read on a past post they removed the drive shaft and jacked the rear up and dropped the rear spring on the passanger side , not sure how that would help
Is there a trick to removing the fuel tank on 80 HJ 45 , it almost seems like the cab needs to be raised 8 inches to remove it from its cradle , any past knowledge out there
Lol dirt dobber nest , they cylinder shape nest out of mud and they pack the cylinder full of paralysis spiders , they lay a egg and bon appetite for the new wasp