Those Trailer haulers were made in Ottawa Kansas and they eventually became Ottawa Kalmar and I believe the 70s or 80s I went to their original plant after they rebuilt due to fire and flood to tour it for some school thing I found it kind of cool
The fact that it ran for several minutes without oil, threw a rod, put a fist sized hole in the block, and even sheared an entire lobe off the cam, and ran SMOOTHER than before says way more about the reliability of the 12v than the fact that I've never seen one blown up. Cant wait to see it's the carnage in the teardown
They most definitely do have catastrophic failures, at stock power levels like this truck where they’re set at 180hp they’ll last a LONG time but with all the stop/starts and idle hours a yard spotter sees they’ll go through 3 or 4 BT5.9’s in their life.
@@J.R.in_WV Oh, yes, they will indeed! The 12v I blew up went in pretty much the exact same way. It was also in a “yard goat” I told my supervisor it was going to go, and his reply was; “Good! That thing needs a new motor!” It’s hard to justify taking such a valuable and expensive piece of equipment out of action for two days for engine maintenance, but engine FAILURE is a whole different ballgame. No lengthy rebuild here: just throw a crate motor in, and away you go!
To approximately quote Jeremy clarkson, “if a cats walking around a wood chipper, you can sit for hours with a camera and wait, or you can throw the damn thing in and be done with it.” Cummins, meet wood chipper
They gave you that for free, the chassis alone is worth about $10,000 used. They just didn't want to take this time to sell it. Yard trucks are extremely expensive brand new, and really a good value used, the problem is that shipping them long distances usually is way more. I bet you could part that out for quite a hefty profit. The double reduction planetary gear set in the rear end is worth about $3,000 on its own.
Eric was just proving his oft repeated mantra that if you don’t check your engine oil and run it anyway bad things will happen and he successfully demonstrated his point! Also while playing us, he’s quite amused with himself. Well played Eric! 😂👍
At this point, you’ll be selling it by the pound in any case so as long as you shovel up the pieces that fly off and throw them on board somewhere, there are no wrong answers. It’s pretty worn out and used up so it’s doubtful anyone would want it for it’s intended purpose so give the viewers what they want; the ultimate but terminal act of abuse! 🥸👍🔥❌👀✅
Good news! The oil pressure gauge IS working. I knew as soon as you started it; dead cylinder. 5.9 12 valves absolutely blow up. A lot. And it's most likely a heater grid being a '95, not glow plugs. The buzzer was the low air pressure alarm - if it's got the Cummins/Wabco compressor, save it. It's on the driver side, mounted to the side of the block, bolted to the timing cover. It's gear driven. Last I looked, cores were over $700. Cores! Better news! Kalmar Ottawa says this truck should have an Allison transmission AND Meritor axles, both of which are BIG bucks. If it's an Allison with PTO, that is pure cash money. Sometimes from GM truck and SUV owners with the Duramax! So yeah! Blow up the 12 valve! Destroy the body! Perform strange science experiments in the interior!
Us truckers call that vehicle a "Yard Dog". It is used to move trailers around in a yard, to a dock and to park. Sometimes to a door where a truck is hard to access. That yellow button is the air brake release and the red knob is for when an air line is attached to the towed trailer and to release it's airbrake.
With how sluggish it was moving I am really wondering if he was dragging brakes the whole time, seeing as he had no clue what the air brake handles were
honestly the truck was making all sorts of racket add in hes likely never driven a airbrake vehicle while trying to make a video so its natural when flying by the cuff he would miss the knobs im honestly suprised he didnt go for the 5th wheel and raise that up for fun @@Tracert-mc1hu
Every time I see one I always think “look at that weird Pixar lookin ahh Chinese Truck lookin ahh truck in America” They just look goofy without the passenger part of the cabin. I know they have a purpose tho. It’s built for one job. And it’s meant to look like it has one specific job. Respect to the goofy truck
I knew a guy who worked at Chryslers back around the time Lee Iacocca came over to Chrysler, and he worked at the Engine plant over on Mount Elliot in Detroit. He was an engineer, and they used to talk about “validating” the slant 6, which was pretty much abusing it until it failed, causing different failure modes, running them for hours and hours on end, ect. He once told me about how they drained the water, ran it and couldn’t get it to blow up, then drained the oil and had a hard time getting it to blow up! I guess what I’m getting at is two fold, “validate” what’s left of this engine and two, how bout an old 225 slant 6? I’m sure they aren’t as easy to find as they were fifteen years ago or so, but they put them in a ton of rides. Would love to see a slant 6 torn down, possibly with some carnage!
You didn't even follow your number one rule. " Check the oil". My wife says we should call you Eric the dipstick. This was the highlight of my day. I laughed my guts out.
This was absolute comedy gold. I think it's the interspersed "uh oh" like a 5 year old that just did something *really* bad then kept going with the mentality "welp, already in trouble, can't make it worse!"
The engine teardown would be a great video, but a transmission and rear end teardown would be absolutely fascinating. You could get at least 3 great videos out of this!
Yeah, I'm with you guys. For a guy who constantly harps about engine lubrication, checking the dipstick should have been his first act if not just wanting to grenade the thing. That squawking sounds like dry engine bearings to me and boy was that tough to watch.
I've driven a few of those! Cummins or Volvo power, ZF or Allison boxes, it matters not, it's a miserable shift in the depths of winter and not much better in summer. They're only ever any good for the first few months of their lives, after that they're a rolling wreck, held together with second hand fencing wire and the power of wishful thinking. Zero oil pressure and missing cylinders? Tis but a flesh wound! You've done something remarkable if you've killed it!
Yard goats are the MAGNET for half-assed repairs. I've never gotten to drive one with anything other than a 12 or 24 valve cummins rattle trap other than some new TICO's we have with the 8.8 liter PSI AKA BBC V8's, although those things are turds the Cummins trucks destroy them in every way possible. Not sure which is worse, winter with poor heat or broiling in the summer with the dashboard so hot you can't hardly touch it.
@@MattsRageFitGarage We have Terberg over here, a Dutch company who make all sorts of specialist trucks out of Volvo parts. But it's only the 6 litre equivalent to the 6BT, so it's nothing much to write home about! Just as unkillable though. I didn't mind a yard shift now and then, but I kept a set of overalls in my car for that purpose. Another layer in winter, skin protection against roasting hot vinyl in summer, and knowing it was going to get messy anyway. But at least I was home every night, and close to the kettle!
@@creepingjesus5106 All of the rigs we have at work are either 20+ year old ottawa's, some 10 year old capacity trucks which I don't like and some Tico pro spotters in both old and new cab design which I really don't like driving. The Y30 I drive is a refurb and the odometer quit last year at 261,000 miles LOL
I've worn out three of those and worked on them also . There are no glow plugs in that engine . It's the same engine that was installed in to the earlier dodge pickups ( as well many other vehicles and as a stationary power supply - pumps ) . It would have a heater grid in the intake ...
The wait to start is a light on the dash when you turn the key on . The buzzer is probably low oil psi or low air pressure. The cab jacks up/ tilts forward for engine removal
My Mack has the same buzzer. It is a low air warning. Once air pressure reaches 75 PSI it stops. Many of the old Macks do not have glow plugs. Just hold throttle to the floor and crank for 10 seconds. Some Cummins are the same.
Man that was good!!!On a day where I was rear ended in my Jeep,Eric provided some comic relief.Thankyou so much.We could almost smell it in Wisconsin!!
@@Goat-rp5lw yeah they seem to be. Thinking about it now it probably is part of the cam, as the rod broke it probably swung and broke the cam as it was spinning.
I regret cheering for this video yesterday 😂, you ruined a perfectly good Cummins block. Ok...I acknowledge it was actually very educational. If an engine has obvious rod knock, just shut it off to avoid more damage
Even as adept ape already commented on the first ever medium duty diesel Eric tore down as many try to go back to the caterpillar 3126 teardown to know there is a teardown video coming after the stock 12 valve Cummins was pulled from the yard shunter and given an autopsy.
This. This right here. This is why we can't have nice things. "Let's see if it drives." is Eric-speak for lets destroy the trans, too. Love you and your videos, dude.
The horrible grinding/squealing noises you were hearing was the metal of the bearings grinding away on all the metal rotating bits. Engines tend to squeal before they start knocking or eject parts. I’m guessing there was no oil in that engine at all, and based off the fact that you didn’t pull the dipstick before starting, I’m guessing you knew that.
In the top 3 best videos on your channel! My wife came running into my bathroom and had to know if I was OK ? Guess she isn’t comfortable with that much laughter from the toilet. That’s saying something, we’ve been married 25 years . Good job Bro !
Take the chunky chili out of the bottom end, deactivate the injection for the dead cylinder, patch the holes (sorta), dump some old used oil in it, and see how much it takes to shatter the crank due to imbalance. * might wanna rig that last bit remotely...
Well Eric, congratulations on being the first person to blow up a stock 12 valve. Totally possible when looking for thousands of horsepower, but STOCK? Yard trucks (yarddogs in the industry) are very expensive and just the carcus is probably worth a small mint. Looking forward to the teardown video.
@@crackpotfoxin the rust belt. If people undercoated brand-new vehicles like 90s2000 5.9s with 5 speed. They felt like dodge neons lifted with a torque monster engine. I think dodge is cheaply made and feel. But there combo of engine and 5spd was smooth and nimble. I dont like repairing v8 diesels..maybe they will invent a inline 8 with short rods huge pistons. With a wide machined crank wide. And inject 2 cylinders at stroke. So instead of let's say 15264837 it would run twos per stroke
I have operated a spotter for a number of years. I would love nothing more than to see you tear that bad boy down. For future reference, if you want to get going make sure that you push in the yellow air brake. That will get the truck going. If you need to raise the cab there is a cable that you have to pull that is connected to the switch. Usually it is red or clear. You have to pull that cable to release the cab tilt lock. And then you can raise the cab.
Its easy to operate. I have driven those around the yard. The handel raises the 5th wheel up and down when the pto is on, it also has a air release for the 5th wheel. The big chrome button when u push it down. Yard goats are fun and easy to use. Quick to move loads around the yard. Always check the rear leaf springs. Some times they break the u bolts.
Reminds me of the time when I was in the Air Force working at the Fort Dix Warfare Center Satellite Maintenance Shop. We maintained our Air Force tactical fleet assigned to Warfare Center for tactical field training. An old M35 (with the multifuel engine) was driven to our shop for no oil pressure. Somehow the oil drain plug was missing, and they drove it out to the field and back (2 hour round trip, not including how long they were out there). At some point they were contacted by the Browns Mills, NJ PD to inform us that one of the trucks in the convoy had left an oil slick on the way out to the training site. It was pretty noisy when they pulled into the yard. It was very obvious the bearings were done. We decided to do a test to see how long it would run before it locked up. FOUR HOURS later it finally seized. It was impressive how it continued to run even at the lowest RPM we've ever seen. They don't make engines like that anymore. Those things can run on just about anything that is combustible. The Army has a surplus of those trucks, so getting an engine was very easy. Had it swapped and running again in four days! We tore down the engine and was amazed at the carnage. The entire crank lost about half of the thickness of the mating surfaces; the rods were almost worn all the way through. It actually didn't seize; it just couldn't maintain compression after the pistons wollard out the cylinders! The rings and sides of the pistons were shaved down quite a bit. The cylinders showed a lot of spider cracking where they had been worn down by the pistons. The amount of unburned fuel and metal in the oil pan was impressive. We had put a plug in the pan and when we drained it, it equaled the full capacity of the oil pan! We decided to make a display of the disassembled engine with pics and videos of the entire ordeal. Not sure if it is still on display, but it was supposed to be maintained as a historical artifact that attests to the engineering of the good ol' multi-fuel engine! It should be on display at the Warfare Center for Fort Dix, NJ.
Eric, that truck has an automatic trans with the shift leaver on your right. The long leaver next to the shift leaver raises and lowers the fifth wheel. The yellow button releases the tractor brakes with pushing the button in. The red button handles the trailer brakes. That scraping noise sounds like a rod bearing or main bearing. Low oil pressure?
Haha that neutral drop was epic! You gotta finish the job Eric, finish cooking the McNuggets. Not just a brick on the gas pedal tho, maybe find a Prius and squash it while the Cummins goes out in a blaze of glory! Just make sure you don't hurt the water pump, I know a guy who's looking for a used one.
A used water pump sounds like a bad idea, especially this particular one! Your buddy is gonna be doing it all over aging going w\ the used water pump. Waterpumps are a wear item & need to be rebuilt atleast. But hey, if he wants to do it twice or more, go for it! 👍👌💥💨⚠️🚜🚧🛠️🔧🤷♂️🤔
6:37 “What is that sound?” Main/rod bearings! I’ve heard that sound…. ONCE. Right before a rod cap on a 5.9 12v I was driving broke. I used to work for a company that had a “Yard Goat” that looked exactly like this one (They all look like this one, more or less…) As a truck driver for the company, we all had to drive it, every now and then. Most of them can be made street legal, so they can run on the street, between yards, or to park/pick-up trailers off the street. Most will do 55 Mph, but they are generally not much fun at high speeds, as they have very stiff suspension and few creature comforts. They are mostly used for pulling trailers on and off the docks. If you want to work on your backing skills as a truck driver, these are the perfect way to do it!
So with air brakes, the Yellow knob you have to pull out to set the brakes. In order to move, you push the yellow knob back in. Edit: That angry buzzing noise means low air pressure, after it runs a few minutes to build up it will/should go silent.
I think you should make a timelapse video of all the guys in your shop gathering up all their tools and seeing how quickly they can fully dismantle the truck for scrap. Just unbolt literally every bolt. And OBVIOUSLY tear the engine down, there's zero question about that
Hearing that Starter took me back... My Grandpa had an Old 12Valve Cummins Dodge Dually for basically my entire Childhood. I got to drive it in my teens, thing was kinda a dog but man did it sound cool.
You should try to fix the holes in the block and fill it with oil and see how long it will last. Just weld or bolt some sheet metal over the hole and silicone the gaps. Even if oil is added, with those big inspection ports the oil will escape and seize the other con rods. Maybe cap off the fuel line to that rear cylinder so it can’t fill the crankcase with fuel.
Not long at all. It's not going to have any oil pressure with a thrown rod, almost all the oil will take the path of least resistance and shoot out the oil holes in the crankshaft instead of going to the bearings. If the oil holes in that crank journal were somehow plugged off, it might possibly have a chance of lasting a little longer as long as there aren't other huge internal oil leaks from the broken camshaft, which there likely are.
@@averyalexander2303 Cut a strap of rubber from something, wrap the journal with it, cinch down tight with wide worm clamps. And then go ahead and pinch off the #5 and #6 injector lines so you don't dilute what oil's left. It's now a 4 cylinder, since that cam broke on 5, 6 is just dead pumping. May as well pin the valves open a little with some shims and cut some of the resistance. Might have oiling issues from whatever lubes the tappets, if it's not just splash lubed, since that one is out of it's bore. I'm familiar in general, but not specifics.
@@mfree80286 Sounds like that could work. Only problem is that's not going to undo the damage to the rest of the engine caused presumably by running low on oil, so odds are very good that it will fail again right after the "repair".
@@averyalexander2303 Well, yeah... nobody's thinking a patch job would get this ready for a road trip. This is the kind of thing you spend an hour on to get it running well enough to get it out of a tight spot so a heavy can fetch and begone with it. Extra *minutes* of operation are a success.
By far my favorite channel on UA-cam. When you parked it and it started rolling I was stressing. The truck driver in me was saying “yellow valve” the whole time haha. Keep up the great work
I see why they call them yard dogs now, that thing has an impressive turn radius. Would be good for moving trailers and other things around tight areas.
3:21 On a good day you might be able to get one of those things to about 45mph. They CAN be ferried down the road but that's usually only done to either A: get lunch for the driver in it or B: fuel it up. Keep in mind you've got a 3/4 ton pickup truck engine trying to move 50,000+ pounds around. It ain't geared for fast.
Even as trucking companies have yard shunters when a trucking company was to diagnose an older Ottawa model 30 as scrap steel after blowing up a revelry stock 12 valve Cummins as if the engine actually ran on five cylinders.
The answer to your question Eric lies within. What are 5.9 parts worth? Obviously the crank, block, cam, and 1 rod are gone, possibly the head, etc etc. If those parts that possibly remain are worthless, turn on the juice and see what shakes loose. No matter what, you still got a chassis to sell or scrap. You can't lose. Also, congrats on being a Dad, a loving husband, and a success! You've earned it! From a long time viewer and friend. Kyle T
Great content as always! What an interesting vehicle! sell the chassis off, looks in decent shape, and pull the motor for a gauranteed high view teardown, people sure love those old Cummins.
It fixed itself! Uh-Oh parts in the parking lot... It's so much better now! Uh-Oh that's really bad! 🤣 Like a kid with a new toy... appreciate the entertainment and a good chuckle this evening!
😂Was great to see you having fun creating “inspection ports” instead of being on the receiving end! Morbidly curious on how much that Cummins can take before you tear into it; however, I’d rather see you turn a good profit on the beast!
A couple of very small adjustments on the injection pump will end up with a severely over fueled motor resulting in a runaway diesel(the engine won’t be able to be stopped unless you stop the air supply, or it REALLY grenades). So my vote is to do just that and REALLY see what a blown up 12 valve is like!!!
A runaway happens when the motor starts feeding off its own oil. Usually when the turbo goes bad and starts putting oil through the intake side. An injector pump on these motors can’t cause a runaway. What shuts a 12V off is a solenoid that cuts fuel when the key is turned off. There’s no way a modified P pump would cause a classic runaway where you can’t cut it off with the key.
@@GMbowtie350 I did not see a P pump on this one. I know it is a 1995 model, and in the pickup trucks of that year came with a P pump. If it has a rotary pump like is used on the 89-93 pickup trucks then the injection pump can be modified to cause a runaway. On modern electronic injected trucks, you are correct in that a runaway is caused by oil consumption. On older mechanical injected trucks it is most definitely possible to have a runaway condition due to an improperly adjusted injection pump.
@@91CavGT5You’ll never get that kind of fuel adjustment out of a VE pump. You can adjust the low smoke screw a little bit but that was about it. They were horrible for tuning and made no power. That’s the whole reason people junk those for the P pump. And even still a VE pump still has a shut off solenoid. Even if you could get it to run away you could still cut the key off and kill the fuel. There has to be a shut off on any pre common rail injection pump otherwise how would you kill the motor? They’re all cam driven.
@@91CavGT5Those are hot rod pumps with a good couple of grand in them, if not more. That’s nowhere near anything we’re talking about. Head work on the pump, cam gear, everything. That’s a lot more than “just a few very small adjustments”. Plus the shut off solenoid would’ve had to be dicked with for it not to cut off with the key. On a stock pump it more than likely couldn’t happen. Plus that’s not really a runaway. That’s more or less the pump hanging up from the oversized springs and shit. Can you technically call it a runaway? You could but a classic runaway is when it feeds off of a fuel source other than diesel. When someone says “runaway” in a diesel they generally think of running on its own oil.
It actually managed to power through the failure! Really hope we get to see it torn down. Would be interesting to watch you disassemble the truck too. BTW these were (and still are) made in Kansas.
My dad used to use one of these at the trucking company he worked at. They would move trailers to and from the loading docks, then hook tractors up, so other drivers would take loads out.
That engine had no oil in it. That oil pressure gauge probably works just fine. Even with the extra ventilation, it hardly put a drop of oil on the ground.
God this made me laugh! Just think on the fuel saving now it's only a 5 litre engine :) That said, the engine is done! Whilst it's sad, I say finish it and lets see how you killed it. I'm sure you might be able to fit another inspection port. Big fan of yours from the UK :)
That sound you heard at idle was the crank milling out some fresh chips for the oil pan. It still runs. Send it all the way. Start with a full can of ether, if it snorts all that, you gotta send a full bottle of silly spray at it at full throttle. Its already put holes in the block, might as well put her out in spectacular fashion.
I really think you should make an around the shop work vehicle out of it. Throw some oil to it , clean it up, put a pc o f sheet metal over the hole. Make it a 5 cylinder. What do you think?
Eric, this was a nice midweek pick me up. I love your teardowns, "will it runs," and miscellaneous Miata musings. But this, this was fun. I'm always sad to see an engine blown and I'd be curious what got it to this point. Maybe an engine autopsy would explain. Was it lack of oil? Killer dowel pin? At a minimum, I'm stoked at the possibility of you crashing this into some cars. That would be absolutely wild.
Haha, amazing. Real time engine destruction. I hope this video goes viral man, great content. Would love to see it driven even more, abuse it, let it go out with an even bigger bang. T-bone some of the other parts cars on the lot, go wild! (and stay safe)
I don't know all the questions...but all the answers are content. And for the future, connecting rod caps that were just yeeted out of the engine will be a tad warm.
I have the pleasure of working on those frequently.... our maintenance shop works on over the road diesel trucks, trailers and these as we have a few of them to move trailers around. Most of them run the 6.7 cummins and Allison trans for motivation. Our 5.9 ottawa is however the workhorse. There is a lot to dislike on them lol. For the beating they take daily though, they are are definitely tougher than most trucks, except for a Mack. Our distribution center on the same complex moves an egregious number of trailers per day and they break down more frequently with hydraulic issues, elecrical and suspension problems because they drive too fast on a crap parking lot with speed bumps and pot holes lol. We've (the mechanics) dreamed of seeing one "come-apart" so beat it to death 😅 I'll supply the popcorn for my buddies as we watch your shenanigans!
That engine probably has 50,000 hours on it. The yellow button is the parking brakes, push in the drive, pull out to park. That engine has a grid heater not glow plugs. Anyway now just have fun with it then do a teardown.
I found your channel just by chance about a week ago and now I can't stop watching them. You do a pretty great job of finding out what really went wrong with these engines. I am a nomad that lives down by the river in a van and you really show the importance of keeping that oil changed as I put a lot of miles on my van. I see a pattern of sludge buildup and wonder if synthetic oil is the cause because most of the engines you tear down people would likely use synthetic oil in them..
Hahahahah you said Jock
Look at all the metal on the ground...."Parts Gravity!"
Those Trailer haulers were made in Ottawa Kansas and they eventually became Ottawa Kalmar and I believe the 70s or 80s I went to their original plant after they rebuilt due to fire and flood to tour it for some school thing I found it kind of cool
That oil pressure gauge may have been working lmao
He never checked the oil level. There was none !
Sure didn’t see any oil on either the broken bits or thru the inspection port…
If it’s leaking oil it’s got oil 😂 not sure it was leaking oil
😂😂
Exactly what I was thinking 😮
The fact that it ran for several minutes without oil, threw a rod, put a fist sized hole in the block, and even sheared an entire lobe off the cam, and ran SMOOTHER than before says way more about the reliability of the 12v than the fact that I've never seen one blown up.
Cant wait to see it's the carnage in the teardown
They most definitely do have catastrophic failures, at stock power levels like this truck where they’re set at 180hp they’ll last a LONG time but with all the stop/starts and idle hours a yard spotter sees they’ll go through 3 or 4 BT5.9’s in their life.
Ya that is pretty badass
The definition of self clearing
@@J.R.in_WV Oh, yes, they will indeed! The 12v I blew up went in pretty much the exact same way. It was also in a “yard goat” I told my supervisor it was going to go, and his reply was; “Good! That thing needs a new motor!” It’s hard to justify taking such a valuable and expensive piece of equipment out of action for two days for engine maintenance, but engine FAILURE is a whole different ballgame. No lengthy rebuild here: just throw a crate motor in, and away you go!
I REALLY hope we get to see you tear this down this weekend!
Now we need the teardown!!!!
Your what my Dad calls a “Damn Fool” haha welcome to the club haha tear it down my brother
+1
When there aren't enough catastrophic failures out there, sometimes you just have to go and make your own.
At least we have the back story on this one, and video of it dying
To approximately quote Jeremy clarkson, “if a cats walking around a wood chipper, you can sit for hours with a camera and wait, or you can throw the damn thing in and be done with it.” Cummins, meet wood chipper
Well Said !
Let’s see some Carnage !
They gave you that for free, the chassis alone is worth about $10,000 used. They just didn't want to take this time to sell it. Yard trucks are extremely expensive brand new, and really a good value used, the problem is that shipping them long distances usually is way more. I bet you could part that out for quite a hefty profit. The double reduction planetary gear set in the rear end is worth about $3,000 on its own.
Possibly however sometimes they just wanted to offload it quickly and free offloading is better than paying someone to sell it
And still another diesel teardown 👍😎
Well, you have ole' blue, now you have ole' grey....
Ottawa Kansas not Canada lol, they’re made like 50 miles from where I’m from.
$10,000 for a 30yr old yard dog chassis? Is that $10,000 Canadian or $1,000 US? 😅
Eric was just proving his oft repeated mantra that if you don’t check your engine oil and run it anyway bad things will happen and he successfully demonstrated his point! Also while playing us, he’s quite amused with himself. Well played Eric! 😂👍
It OBVIOUSLY needed a self-created inspection port.
Also, did you check the oil before starting? Isn't that Eric's rule number one?
Oh Hello
Sounded like bearings squeaking from starvation
I'm pretty sure there were signs of a problem, but he just pushed through it.
At this point, you’ll be selling it by the pound in any case so as long as you shovel up the pieces that fly off and throw them on board somewhere, there are no wrong answers. It’s pretty worn out and used up so it’s doubtful anyone would want it for it’s intended purpose so give the viewers what they want; the ultimate but terminal act of abuse! 🥸👍🔥❌👀✅
I think it was deliberate xd
Good news! The oil pressure gauge IS working. I knew as soon as you started it; dead cylinder. 5.9 12 valves absolutely blow up. A lot. And it's most likely a heater grid being a '95, not glow plugs. The buzzer was the low air pressure alarm - if it's got the Cummins/Wabco compressor, save it. It's on the driver side, mounted to the side of the block, bolted to the timing cover. It's gear driven. Last I looked, cores were over $700. Cores!
Better news! Kalmar Ottawa says this truck should have an Allison transmission AND Meritor axles, both of which are BIG bucks. If it's an Allison with PTO, that is pure cash money. Sometimes from GM truck and SUV owners with the Duramax! So yeah! Blow up the 12 valve! Destroy the body! Perform strange science experiments in the interior!
"There's parts in the parking lot that weren't there before!"
Classic! Great video!
Us truckers call that vehicle a "Yard Dog". It is used to move trailers around in a yard, to a dock and to park. Sometimes to a door where a truck is hard to access. That yellow button is the air brake release and the red knob is for when an air line is attached to the towed trailer and to release it's airbrake.
With how sluggish it was moving I am really wondering if he was dragging brakes the whole time, seeing as he had no clue what the air brake handles were
This video was so painful to watch. Those have got to be the easiest trucks to drive and he made it look like rocket science.
im thinking the PTO was engaged as well
@@micahreid5553
honestly the truck was making all sorts of racket add in hes likely never driven a airbrake vehicle while trying to make a video so its natural when flying by the cuff he would miss the knobs im honestly suprised he didnt go for the 5th wheel and raise that up for fun @@Tracert-mc1hu
Every time I see one I always think “look at that weird Pixar lookin ahh Chinese Truck lookin ahh truck in America”
They just look goofy without the passenger part of the cabin. I know they have a purpose tho. It’s built for one job. And it’s meant to look like it has one specific job.
Respect to the goofy truck
I knew a guy who worked at Chryslers back around the time Lee Iacocca came over to Chrysler, and he worked at the Engine plant over on Mount Elliot in Detroit. He was an engineer, and they used to talk about “validating” the slant 6, which was pretty much abusing it until it failed, causing different failure modes, running them for hours and hours on end, ect. He once told me about how they drained the water, ran it and couldn’t get it to blow up, then drained the oil and had a hard time getting it to blow up! I guess what I’m getting at is two fold, “validate” what’s left of this engine and two, how bout an old 225 slant 6? I’m sure they aren’t as easy to find as they were fifteen years ago or so, but they put them in a ton of rides. Would love to see a slant 6 torn down, possibly with some carnage!
You didn't even follow your number one rule. " Check the oil". My wife says we should call you Eric the dipstick. This was the highlight of my day. I laughed my guts out.
This was absolute comedy gold.
I think it's the interspersed "uh oh" like a 5 year old that just did something *really* bad then kept going with the mentality "welp, already in trouble, can't make it worse!"
The engine teardown would be a great video, but a transmission and rear end teardown would be absolutely fascinating. You could get at least 3 great videos out of this!
The longer I watched this the more convinced I was that he just wanted to trash the motor. 🤣
No doubt. You can hear it in his voice. :P
I've seen tiktok reaction content doing a more convincing "oh no" than this 😅
Sounds like crap. I should stop.
Let's see if she starts again
Yeah, I'm with you guys. For a guy who constantly harps about engine lubrication, checking the dipstick should have been his first act if not just wanting to grenade the thing. That squawking sounds like dry engine bearings to me and boy was that tough to watch.
Its not like he could have saved the engine by putting oil back in it, it was smoked when he bought it
😂 as a trucker watching him drive that is pretty funny.. you want to pull the yellow knob to apply the brakes 😉
I've driven a few of those! Cummins or Volvo power, ZF or Allison boxes, it matters not, it's a miserable shift in the depths of winter and not much better in summer. They're only ever any good for the first few months of their lives, after that they're a rolling wreck, held together with second hand fencing wire and the power of wishful thinking. Zero oil pressure and missing cylinders? Tis but a flesh wound! You've done something remarkable if you've killed it!
Yard goats are the MAGNET for half-assed repairs. I've never gotten to drive one with anything other than a 12 or 24 valve cummins rattle trap other than some new TICO's we have with the 8.8 liter PSI AKA BBC V8's, although those things are turds the Cummins trucks destroy them in every way possible. Not sure which is worse, winter with poor heat or broiling in the summer with the dashboard so hot you can't hardly touch it.
@@MattsRageFitGarage We have Terberg over here, a Dutch company who make all sorts of specialist trucks out of Volvo parts. But it's only the 6 litre equivalent to the 6BT, so it's nothing much to write home about! Just as unkillable though.
I didn't mind a yard shift now and then, but I kept a set of overalls in my car for that purpose. Another layer in winter, skin protection against roasting hot vinyl in summer, and knowing it was going to get messy anyway. But at least I was home every night, and close to the kettle!
@@creepingjesus5106 All of the rigs we have at work are either 20+ year old ottawa's, some 10 year old capacity trucks which I don't like and some Tico pro spotters in both old and new cab design which I really don't like driving. The Y30 I drive is a refurb and the odometer quit last year at 261,000 miles LOL
I've worn out three of those and worked on them also . There are no glow plugs in that engine . It's the same engine that was installed in to the earlier dodge pickups ( as well many other vehicles and as a stationary power supply - pumps ) . It would have a heater grid in the intake ...
The wait to start is a light on the dash when you turn the key on . The buzzer is probably low oil psi or low air pressure. The cab jacks up/ tilts forward for engine removal
My Mack has the same buzzer. It is a low air warning. Once air pressure reaches 75 PSI it stops. Many of the old Macks do not have glow plugs. Just hold throttle to the floor and crank for 10 seconds. Some Cummins are the same.
Man that was good!!!On a day where I was rear ended in my Jeep,Eric provided some comic relief.Thankyou so much.We could almost smell it in Wisconsin!!
That's absolutely crazy that it still started after barfing multiple rod caps and part of the camshaft! Holy cow!!
It was 1 rod cap and part of the rod I think
@@xinx-fn8973looked like the small end of a rod and part of a wrist pin maybe?
@@xXxDETZxXx 🤔 Wrist pins... aren't those things indestructible? 🤣🤣🤣
@@Goat-rp5lw yeah they seem to be. Thinking about it now it probably is part of the cam, as the rod broke it probably swung and broke the cam as it was spinning.
I regret cheering for this video yesterday 😂, you ruined a perfectly good Cummins block. Ok...I acknowledge it was actually very educational. If an engine has obvious rod knock, just shut it off to avoid more damage
Unfortunately I've got to wait a couple of hours to watch malice in the combustion palace... Worth it.
This time we got the malice in the parking lot first. 😂
Eric this might make you one of those “people” who can blow up anything. I look forward to the tear down. The Toyota 4.0l also still ran when pulled.
Legendary. You did the theoretical impossible. I've never seen a blown up 12 valve.
Running with a dry crankcase will destroy anything 😂
That was very nice of you to help ventilate the very hot engine.
‘You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain…’
Adept Ape would love to have this on his destruction of the week segment.
Even as adept ape already commented on the first ever medium duty diesel Eric tore down as many try to go back to the caterpillar 3126 teardown to know there is a teardown video coming after the stock 12 valve Cummins was pulled from the yard shunter and given an autopsy.
Would love to see a video of you pulling that Cummings 12 valve out, then another few of you tearing down every piece o the drive line and engine
This. This right here. This is why we can't have nice things. "Let's see if it drives." is Eric-speak for lets destroy the trans, too. Love you and your videos, dude.
Nice things like worn out diesel engines?
@@Me-zo8ycIt’s all about perspective.
Usually just come here for the ASMenR of bolts being cracked and 10's getting zipped, but I learn so much from this channel
The horrible grinding/squealing noises you were hearing was the metal of the bearings grinding away on all the metal rotating bits. Engines tend to squeal before they start knocking or eject parts.
I’m guessing there was no oil in that engine at all, and based off the fact that you didn’t pull the dipstick before starting, I’m guessing you knew that.
In the top 3 best videos on your channel! My wife came running into my bathroom and had to know if I was OK ? Guess she isn’t comfortable with that much laughter from the toilet. That’s saying something, we’ve been married 25 years . Good job Bro !
Take the chunky chili out of the bottom end, deactivate the injection for the dead cylinder, patch the holes (sorta), dump some old used oil in it, and see how much it takes to shatter the crank due to imbalance.
* might wanna rig that last bit remotely...
till 6 months ago I worked at a shop restoring these terminal tractors, this is way better shape then most we rebuilt
Well Eric, congratulations on being the first person to blow up a stock 12 valve.
Totally possible when looking for thousands of horsepower, but STOCK?
Yard trucks (yarddogs in the industry) are very expensive and just the carcus is probably worth a small mint.
Looking forward to the teardown video.
Not even blown up the damn thing just added an inspection port and deleted a cylinder it runs even better without the dead cylinder in the way 🤣
@@TwisteeTheDefiant1
Performance enhancements? lol
12vs totally blow up, just not when the dodge chassis around them falls apart first.
@@crackpotfoxin the rust belt. If people undercoated brand-new vehicles like 90s2000 5.9s with 5 speed. They felt like dodge neons lifted with a torque monster engine. I think dodge is cheaply made and feel. But there combo of engine and 5spd was smooth and nimble. I dont like repairing v8 diesels..maybe they will invent a inline 8 with short rods huge pistons. With a wide machined crank wide. And inject 2 cylinders at stroke. So instead of let's say 15264837 it would run twos per stroke
I have operated a spotter for a number of years. I would love nothing more than to see you tear that bad boy down. For future reference, if you want to get going make sure that you push in the yellow air brake. That will get the truck going. If you need to raise the cab there is a cable that you have to pull that is connected to the switch. Usually it is red or clear. You have to pull that cable to release the cab tilt lock. And then you can raise the cab.
Its easy to operate. I have driven those around the yard. The handel raises the 5th wheel up and down when the pto is on, it also has a air release for the 5th wheel. The big chrome button when u push it down. Yard goats are fun and easy to use. Quick to move loads around the yard. Always check the rear leaf springs. Some times they break the u bolts.
Reminds me of the time when I was in the Air Force working at the Fort Dix Warfare Center Satellite Maintenance Shop. We maintained our Air Force tactical fleet assigned to Warfare Center for tactical field training. An old M35 (with the multifuel engine) was driven to our shop for no oil pressure. Somehow the oil drain plug was missing, and they drove it out to the field and back (2 hour round trip, not including how long they were out there). At some point they were contacted by the Browns Mills, NJ PD to inform us that one of the trucks in the convoy had left an oil slick on the way out to the training site. It was pretty noisy when they pulled into the yard. It was very obvious the bearings were done. We decided to do a test to see how long it would run before it locked up. FOUR HOURS later it finally seized. It was impressive how it continued to run even at the lowest RPM we've ever seen. They don't make engines like that anymore. Those things can run on just about anything that is combustible. The Army has a surplus of those trucks, so getting an engine was very easy. Had it swapped and running again in four days! We tore down the engine and was amazed at the carnage. The entire crank lost about half of the thickness of the mating surfaces; the rods were almost worn all the way through. It actually didn't seize; it just couldn't maintain compression after the pistons wollard out the cylinders! The rings and sides of the pistons were shaved down quite a bit. The cylinders showed a lot of spider cracking where they had been worn down by the pistons. The amount of unburned fuel and metal in the oil pan was impressive. We had put a plug in the pan and when we drained it, it equaled the full capacity of the oil pan! We decided to make a display of the disassembled engine with pics and videos of the entire ordeal. Not sure if it is still on display, but it was supposed to be maintained as a historical artifact that attests to the engineering of the good ol' multi-fuel engine! It should be on display at the Warfare Center for Fort Dix, NJ.
This was BY FAR the most entertaining one you’ve done. BRAVO!
It did sound a lot better after it relived itself on your lot .
You’re such a great content creator and you have the best personality for the job.
Eric, that truck has an automatic trans with the shift leaver on your right. The long leaver next to the shift leaver raises and lowers the fifth wheel. The yellow button releases the tractor brakes with pushing the button in. The red button handles the trailer brakes.
That scraping noise sounds like a rod bearing or main bearing. Low oil pressure?
Low oil pressure??? Well, it WOULD be low... If only there WAS some. (I doubt there was ANY in there)
Definitely make some more videos with this beast. Impressive that the thing still sort of runs after shooting an end cap out the side of the block.
Haha that neutral drop was epic!
You gotta finish the job Eric, finish cooking the McNuggets. Not just a brick on the gas pedal tho, maybe find a Prius and squash it while the Cummins goes out in a blaze of glory!
Just make sure you don't hurt the water pump, I know a guy who's looking for a used one.
A used water pump sounds like a bad idea, especially this particular one! Your buddy is gonna be doing it all over aging going w\ the used water pump. Waterpumps are a wear item & need to be rebuilt atleast. But hey, if he wants to do it twice or more, go for it! 👍👌💥💨⚠️🚜🚧🛠️🔧🤷♂️🤔
@@tdotw77 it's a bit of an in-joke, you'll see what I'm talking about if you watch some of Eric's engine tear downs ;)
I drove one for three years nice to hear that motor starting .
That was fun, lol. A little change to the norm is always good. I'm sure you will make some well deserved money with it.
I worked for GM in the 80's and we used Var-sol to blow up the 5.7 diesels we had to replace. It made the run wide open till they turned loose!
Made a birdhouse out of a 12 valve…..Excellent work!
6:37 “What is that sound?” Main/rod bearings! I’ve heard that sound…. ONCE. Right before a rod cap on a 5.9 12v I was driving broke.
I used to work for a company that had a “Yard Goat” that looked exactly like this one (They all look like this one, more or less…) As a truck driver for the company, we all had to drive it, every now and then. Most of them can be made street legal, so they can run on the street, between yards, or to park/pick-up trailers off the street. Most will do 55 Mph, but they are generally not much fun at high speeds, as they have very stiff suspension and few creature comforts. They are mostly used for pulling trailers on and off the docks. If you want to work on your backing skills as a truck driver, these are the perfect way to do it!
So with air brakes, the Yellow knob you have to pull out to set the brakes. In order to move, you push the yellow knob back in. Edit: That angry buzzing noise means low air pressure, after it runs a few minutes to build up it will/should go silent.
It’s good to see you having fun.
I think you should make a timelapse video of all the guys in your shop gathering up all their tools and seeing how quickly they can fully dismantle the truck for scrap. Just unbolt literally every bolt. And OBVIOUSLY tear the engine down, there's zero question about that
Tow it to your house and park on your driveway, or even on your front lawn as a conversation piece. Your neighbors will love it.
Hearing those bearings squeak from lack of oil pressure is like nails on a chalk board
Hearing that Starter took me back... My Grandpa had an Old 12Valve Cummins Dodge Dually for basically my entire Childhood. I got to drive it in my teens, thing was kinda a dog but man did it sound cool.
You should try to fix the holes in the block and fill it with oil and see how long it will last. Just weld or bolt some sheet metal over the hole and silicone the gaps. Even if oil is added, with those big inspection ports the oil will escape and seize the other con rods. Maybe cap off the fuel line to that rear cylinder so it can’t fill the crankcase with fuel.
I like that idea.
Not long at all. It's not going to have any oil pressure with a thrown rod, almost all the oil will take the path of least resistance and shoot out the oil holes in the crankshaft instead of going to the bearings. If the oil holes in that crank journal were somehow plugged off, it might possibly have a chance of lasting a little longer as long as there aren't other huge internal oil leaks from the broken camshaft, which there likely are.
@@averyalexander2303 Cut a strap of rubber from something, wrap the journal with it, cinch down tight with wide worm clamps. And then go ahead and pinch off the #5 and #6 injector lines so you don't dilute what oil's left. It's now a 4 cylinder, since that cam broke on 5, 6 is just dead pumping. May as well pin the valves open a little with some shims and cut some of the resistance.
Might have oiling issues from whatever lubes the tappets, if it's not just splash lubed, since that one is out of it's bore. I'm familiar in general, but not specifics.
@@mfree80286 Sounds like that could work. Only problem is that's not going to undo the damage to the rest of the engine caused presumably by running low on oil, so odds are very good that it will fail again right after the "repair".
@@averyalexander2303 Well, yeah... nobody's thinking a patch job would get this ready for a road trip. This is the kind of thing you spend an hour on to get it running well enough to get it out of a tight spot so a heavy can fetch and begone with it.
Extra *minutes* of operation are a success.
By far my favorite channel on UA-cam. When you parked it and it started rolling I was stressing. The truck driver in me was saying “yellow valve” the whole time haha. Keep up the great work
I see why they call them yard dogs now, that thing has an impressive turn radius. Would be good for moving trailers and other things around tight areas.
3:21 On a good day you might be able to get one of those things to about 45mph. They CAN be ferried down the road but that's usually only done to either A: get lunch for the driver in it or B: fuel it up.
Keep in mind you've got a 3/4 ton pickup truck engine trying to move 50,000+ pounds around. It ain't geared for fast.
Thanks for showing us all what a blown up 5.9 cummins actually sounds and looks like. Moar Carnage!
Even as trucking companies have yard shunters when a trucking company was to diagnose an older Ottawa model 30 as scrap steel after blowing up a revelry stock 12 valve Cummins as if the engine actually ran on five cylinders.
The answer to your question Eric lies within. What are 5.9 parts worth? Obviously the crank, block, cam, and 1 rod are gone, possibly the head, etc etc. If those parts that possibly remain are worthless, turn on the juice and see what shakes loose. No matter what, you still got a chassis to sell or scrap. You can't lose.
Also, congrats on being a Dad, a loving husband, and a success! You've earned it!
From a long time viewer and friend.
Kyle T
As I sit here and watch the video without reading the comments, I have to believe that oil pressure gauge was working just fine haha.
You may need a bigger engine stand for that beast although it is lighter now with the ejected parts.
I think Stubby The 10 Valve deserves some more carnage especially since it's already made an inspection port
Yeah, we came here for complete carnage and if it still runs that's not carnage.
Great content as always! What an interesting vehicle! sell the chassis off, looks in decent shape, and pull the motor for a gauranteed high view teardown, people sure love those old Cummins.
I think there is an interesting teardown comming up.
It seems like the indistructible engine, is destructible. 😅
It fixed itself! Uh-Oh parts in the parking lot... It's so much better now! Uh-Oh that's really bad! 🤣
Like a kid with a new toy... appreciate the entertainment and a good chuckle this evening!
Yellow square knobs your parking brake. Push to release, pull to set. Good to see you fixed that pesky knocking sound!
😂Was great to see you having fun creating “inspection ports” instead of being on the receiving end! Morbidly curious on how much that Cummins can take before you tear into it; however, I’d rather see you turn a good profit on the beast!
A couple of very small adjustments on the injection pump will end up with a severely over fueled motor resulting in a runaway diesel(the engine won’t be able to be stopped unless you stop the air supply, or it REALLY grenades).
So my vote is to do just that and REALLY see what a blown up 12 valve is like!!!
A runaway happens when the motor starts feeding off its own oil. Usually when the turbo goes bad and starts putting oil through the intake side. An injector pump on these motors can’t cause a runaway. What shuts a 12V off is a solenoid that cuts fuel when the key is turned off. There’s no way a modified P pump would cause a classic runaway where you can’t cut it off with the key.
@@GMbowtie350 I did not see a P pump on this one. I know it is a 1995 model, and in the pickup trucks of that year came with a P pump. If it has a rotary pump like is used on the 89-93 pickup trucks then the injection pump can be modified to cause a runaway.
On modern electronic injected trucks, you are correct in that a runaway is caused by oil consumption. On older mechanical injected trucks it is most definitely possible to have a runaway condition due to an improperly adjusted injection pump.
@@91CavGT5You’ll never get that kind of fuel adjustment out of a VE pump. You can adjust the low smoke screw a little bit but that was about it. They were horrible for tuning and made no power. That’s the whole reason people junk those for the P pump. And even still a VE pump still has a shut off solenoid. Even if you could get it to run away you could still cut the key off and kill the fuel. There has to be a shut off on any pre common rail injection pump otherwise how would you kill the motor? They’re all cam driven.
@@GMbowtie350 oh yes you can!! Go do a quick UA-cam search for 1stgen Cummins runaway.
@@91CavGT5Those are hot rod pumps with a good couple of grand in them, if not more. That’s nowhere near anything we’re talking about. Head work on the pump, cam gear, everything. That’s a lot more than “just a few very small adjustments”. Plus the shut off solenoid would’ve had to be dicked with for it not to cut off with the key. On a stock pump it more than likely couldn’t happen. Plus that’s not really a runaway. That’s more or less the pump hanging up from the oversized springs and shit. Can you technically call it a runaway? You could but a classic runaway is when it feeds off of a fuel source other than diesel. When someone says “runaway” in a diesel they generally think of running on its own oil.
It actually managed to power through the failure! Really hope we get to see it torn down. Would be interesting to watch you disassemble the truck too. BTW these were (and still are) made in Kansas.
My dad used to use one of these at the trucking company he worked at. They would move trailers to and from the loading docks, then hook tractors up, so other drivers would take loads out.
This. iS. Awesome. Eric man you bring out my inner mischievous child who wants to break things then take them apart to see how they work
That is really in great condition compared to the one we had at my last job.
My overall reaction to this was: "Holy crap that was awesome."
Such a unique find. Curious to see what you'll do with it.
Tear it down on the channel! I'd love to see a 12 valve!
It's now a 10 valve
That engine had no oil in it. That oil pressure gauge probably works just fine. Even with the extra ventilation, it hardly put a drop of oil on the ground.
God this made me laugh! Just think on the fuel saving now it's only a 5 litre engine :) That said, the engine is done! Whilst it's sad, I say finish it and lets see how you killed it. I'm sure you might be able to fit another inspection port. Big fan of yours from the UK :)
That sound you heard at idle was the crank milling out some fresh chips for the oil pan.
It still runs. Send it all the way. Start with a full can of ether, if it snorts all that, you gotta send a full bottle of silly spray at it at full throttle. Its already put holes in the block, might as well put her out in spectacular fashion.
You've GOT to do a runaway with that thing! Engine oil into the intake would result in spectacular destruction.....
That was fun!!😂👏👏🎉! Best afternoon break in years! It is less noisy w/o those extra parts🤔🤷💥
I really think you should make an around the shop work vehicle out of it. Throw some oil to it , clean it up, put a pc o f sheet metal over the hole. Make it a 5 cylinder. What do you think?
Eric, congrats on creating the new "inspection port" on the Ottawa hostler.
Eric, this was a nice midweek pick me up. I love your teardowns, "will it runs," and miscellaneous Miata musings. But this, this was fun. I'm always sad to see an engine blown and I'd be curious what got it to this point. Maybe an engine autopsy would explain. Was it lack of oil? Killer dowel pin?
At a minimum, I'm stoked at the possibility of you crashing this into some cars. That would be absolutely wild.
If it seizes,, it will be hard to separate the engine and transmission. Tear it down, you already put patio door in the block! Lmao
Eric "In my next video, we will be tearing down the 5.9l Cummins that I blew up in my previous video, and find out what I broke."
“What is that sound? Let me give it some gas”
Ugh man.. you had me yelling at the screen 😂
The rods on the truck go in and out, all through the block.
"sparsely equipped". Loved that.
Haha, amazing. Real time engine destruction. I hope this video goes viral man, great content. Would love to see it driven even more, abuse it, let it go out with an even bigger bang. T-bone some of the other parts cars on the lot, go wild! (and stay safe)
It's missing a cam,has a hole in the engine block, ejected a crankshaft bearing and is still working. Peak engineering
Take the oil feed off of the turbo and point it into the intake of the turbo. Overfill the engine a little to keep it running longer.
Used to drive these around for work. Love this video. You’re the best brother would love to intern for you just for the knowledge
I don't know all the questions...but all the answers are content.
And for the future, connecting rod caps that were just yeeted out of the engine will be a tad warm.
I have the pleasure of working on those frequently.... our maintenance shop works on over the road diesel trucks, trailers and these as we have a few of them to move trailers around. Most of them run the 6.7 cummins and Allison trans for motivation. Our 5.9 ottawa is however the workhorse. There is a lot to dislike on them lol. For the beating they take daily though, they are are definitely tougher than most trucks, except for a Mack. Our distribution center on the same complex moves an egregious number of trailers per day and they break down more frequently with hydraulic issues, elecrical and suspension problems because they drive too fast on a crap parking lot with speed bumps and pot holes lol. We've (the mechanics) dreamed of seeing one "come-apart" so beat it to death 😅 I'll supply the popcorn for my buddies as we watch your shenanigans!
Pretty sure I can hear a miss on one of the cylinders at the end there.
Prolly just needs a tune up.
Just needs a few revs to help clear the miss
It says something for the tenacity of the 12 valve that it would even run at all with the carnage.
That engine probably has 50,000 hours on it. The yellow button is the parking brakes, push in the drive, pull out to park. That engine has a grid heater not glow plugs. Anyway now just have fun with it then do a teardown.
I found your channel just by chance about a week ago and now I can't stop watching them. You do a pretty great job of finding out what really went wrong with these engines. I am a nomad that lives down by the river in a van and you really show the importance of keeping that oil changed as I put a lot of miles on my van. I see a pattern of sludge buildup and wonder if synthetic oil is the cause because most of the engines you tear down people would likely use synthetic oil in them..