Brakes and clutch work and some impromptu carb work. Both master cylinders were dry. Poured some fluid in and pumped them. Nada. I guess we’ll have to do a proper bleed…
Brakes went fine, with the exception of passenger front- it’s sticky. Maybe it’ll get better with time/ maybe it won’t. While I was under there I noted the front driveshaft has a bad ujoint and more slop then I like in the pinion rotation. Other wise cursory inspection was good. None of that is a deal breaker, but it’s of note.
Clutch bleed didn’t change anything. I was checking the slave out when I found all the fluid. It was in the rod boot. Luckily we were on the lift so it’s pretty painless to get it off. The piston was exactly outed, it looked more like weld spatter in the bore- weird, but true. Tried one from a 66 FST, but no go. Ordered new one. Wait.
Thing is we wanted to drive it!! For two reasons:
- We wanted to try some Seafoam to try and help the idle out. I’ve never used it, but was advised to do it away from work- preferably a deserted parking lot.
- I mean what’s the fun in getting an engine running if you can’t drive it. Right?
- Besides the exhaust note of a blown donut gasket is exhilarating!!!
So with out a clutch I put it in gear and started the engine. When speed is needed 2H is fine, but cautious maneuvers dictate 4L. It worked pretty well. Not flawless but it got the job done. I want to commend the engineers on the gear reduction starter. You can really move things thing with just the starter!!
Once in the deserted parking lot I did some (large) donuts in the gravel lot- for science. You understand.
Then we waited for the prescribed cloud of smoke from the engine cleaner. Never really materialized.
It did foul the filter and the screen in the carb. Swapped in another clear filter and started in the carb.
I should mention it was cool overcast day. What better day to see what this carb looked like on the inside? Really made me miss the hood in the 40, I usual fold it up to the windshield. Lots of room. We were careful and possibly methodical( that’s a lot of black spaghetti in there). We only dropped the metering rod(?) in the engine bay once. Then we blasted the screen from the backside with carb cleaner and mopped the debris from the bowl. Oh yeah it started sprinkling- I guess the hood isn’t so bad after all.
Got it started on full choke and took it back to work. With the truck in motion, speed shifting was possible. I didn’t want to go past second though for fear of the unproven brakes. Best part of the drive back was I was able to drive at zero choke. It didn’t exactly scream, but it didn’t die either. Take the win!!!