That’s assuming the fuel in the tank is bad. With newer fuel, I’d bet it isn’t great but not bad either.Q: Know what you get when you add 1/2 tank of fresh fuel to a 1/2 tank of bad fuel?
A: 1 tank full of bad fuel
That’s assuming the fuel in the tank is bad. With newer fuel, I’d bet it isn’t great but not bad either.Q: Know what you get when you add 1/2 tank of fresh fuel to a 1/2 tank of bad fuel?
A: 1 tank full of bad fuel
I dunno. 5 years is a long time for petrol. Not saying it won't fire off, just that it won't like it and probably have misfires galore. Lawnmower? Sure, go for it. Modern auto? I'd probably just pump it out.That’s assuming the fuel in the tank is bad. With newer fuel, I’d bet it isn’t great but not bad either.
Like I said in my first post, I did the same within the last few months. I’ve done it a lot of times previously too. Will it be wonderful? No, but you honesty couldn’t even really tell much difference. This was in a tuned turbo car too.I dunno. 5 years is a long time for petrol. Not saying it won't fire off, just that it won't like it and probably have misfires galore. Lawnmower? Sure, go for it. Modern auto? I'd probably just pump it out.
I was always under the impression diesel aged better than regular gas, is that not true?
This thing has an old school ignition key rather than a start button?I only tried starting it for about 2 seconds.
Nah it's got a button. I only depressed the button for a couple seconds. I guess if it hasn't started and you let go it stops trying.This thing has an old school ignition key rather than a start button?
The new biodiesel sucks just as hard as the alcohol gasI was always under the impression diesel aged better than regular gas, is that not true?
In terms of shelf life? Good to know.The new biodiesel sucks just as hard as the alcohol gas
Makes the Camry's paltry 5 years of sitting time pathetic by comparison...21 Years since it had tags on it. I bet its been sitting at least 20 years.
Engine oil looked fine, radiator was full of proper green coolant.
Outside air temp was maybe 15 degrees F and it cranked slow as a bitter old man with a battery laying on the ground hooked to it via jumper cables. I figured there was no way there was enough voltage to fire spark plugs it cranked so slow...
It started on the 3rd attempt after putting about 4 gallons of fresh gas in the tank and bottle feeding it till the fuel pump worked.
After we got it running and warming up I noticed 1 of the 8 spark plug leads wasn't even hooked up at the distributor cap....
View attachment 136149
Dad's adult children were kinda bored on Thanksgiving vacation at the farm so we did the right thing as a family, dragged an old truck from its sleepy grave. My nephew is 11 and he loved being outside helping.Makes the Camry's paltry 5 years of sitting time pathetic by comparison...
I'm surprised that of all days to pick -- you'd choose to start a 20-year-idle truck when it's 15 F out . No way the truck enjoyed that!
In your correspondence with Lycoming you should include that as a benchmarkThat crankcase is not sealed, it sits for 10 months out of the year, then is run at 100% power and redline RPM for 200 hours, then put away again. Yet it does just fine, year after year. I think I've got around 3000 hours on the engine now, and would expect it to go to 6,000 without an issue.
Makes the Camry's paltry 5 years of sitting time pathetic by comparison...
I'm surprised that of all days to pick -- you'd choose to start a 20-year-idle truck when it's 15 F out . No way the truck enjoyed that!
Love it. I fondly remember Dad's 79 Chevy k20. Id like to have another one.My grandpa bought brand new in 1979, I got it a few years ago, just polished the paint and put on new wheels and tires on, Its 87K miles. Dad drove it to Memphis & back from South Dakota right before I got it. Original engine & transmission.
View attachment 136153
That's nice. That thing probably has some value to it.My grandpa bought brand new in 1979, I got it a few years ago, just polished the paint and put on new wheels and tires on, Its 87K miles. Dad drove it to Memphis & back from South Dakota right before I got it. Original engine & transmission.
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I agree with this except I would change the oil and filter before cranking. Sometimes the paper filters can come apart. while rare, it's catastrophic. So fresh oil, filter, battery. check the fluid levels and start it.Modern engines are pretty well sealed, so there isn't much issue with corrosion. Same for the fuel system, although automotive gas doesn't store well. A five year old Toyota....I'd put a battery in it and crank it. I bet it'll start. If not, I'd drain the fuel and put in fresh. If you're lucky they parked it without much fuel in it, so you could just fill it up with fresh gas and the old stuff will blend off. The lines could be bled, or you could just crank it for a while until the fresh fuel gets to the engine. I'd change the oil and fuel filter after I got it running. Everything else should be fine. Check the air filter box for mice before you do anything, that would probably be worth replacing due to age as well. Tires will be fine.
you could do that stuff, clean it up and maybe sell it. Classic trucks are getting big money if it's a good runner and cleaned up. Do the above, wash and wax, drive for a month and see what it's worth.21 Years since it had tags on it. I bet its been sitting at least 20 years.
Engine oil looked fine, radiator was full of proper green coolant. The both passenger side tires were flat, driver front was low, and driver rear had a lot of air in it still.
Outside air temp was maybe 15 degrees F and it cranked slow as a bitter old man with a battery laying on the ground hooked to it via jumper cables. I figured there was no way there was enough voltage to fire spark plugs it cranked so slow...
It started on the 3rd attempt after putting about 4 gallons of fresh gas in the tank and bottle feeding it till the fuel pump worked.
After we got it running and warming up I noticed 1 of the 8 spark plug leads wasn't even hooked up at the distributor cap.... Cluch wasn't noisy. Brakes worked too.View attachment 136150
View attachment 136149
Needs more gas
Power Steering Fluid
Alternator Charging?
Fuel Gauge Work?
Front Axle Full?
Rear Axle Full?
Transfer Case Full?
Transmission Full?
Windshield Wipers - Replace
Vacuum Out the Cab and HVAC box
Look over the tires good
Spark Plugs & Spark Plug Wires
Fuel Filter (Wix 33032)
Belts
Hoses
Check all lights
Grease U-joints
WD40/other hood latch and hinges and doors
Driver’s door does not open from inside
Take floor jack and try to raise the driver’s door, it drags opening and closing
That should get the old farm truck moving. Really needs different wheels and tires at some point, ditching the 16.5 wheels.
It's gotten absolutely crazy. There are decent condition 1990's Ford F-250 with a 460 or 7.3L w/180K on the clock asking $18-$25K. It's more than the thing sold for new, lol.you could do that stuff, clean it up and maybe sell it. Classic trucks are getting big money if it's a good runner and cleaned up. Do the above, wash and wax, drive for a month and see what it's worth.
Old is the newest new I guess.It's gotten absolutely crazy. There are decent condition 1990's Ford F-250 with a 460 or 7.3L w/180K on the clock asking $18-$25K. It's more than the thing sold for new, lol.
Classic trucks are getting big money if it's a good runner and cleaned up.
It's gotten absolutely crazy. There are decent condition 1990's Ford F-250 with a 460 or 7.3L w/180K on the clock asking $18-$25K. It's more than the thing sold for new, lol.
It's [not really] amazing what happens to the market value of stuff that works when companies -- for a number of reasons -- put out crap that doesn't and relentlessly raise the asking price for it. Google "enshittification" at your leisure for fun and enlightenment.Old is the newest new I guess.
This was a hilarious outcome, thought I'd post it. Since it's been a year I'll recap: I was offered an essentially brand new Camry that hasn't been turned on in 4 years. Parent got too old, lost their license and just left it as a paperweight in the garage. Then everyone here offered good suggestions about what's needed to get it running again.
But...
In typical family fashion no one could agree on the next best steps were last year, and my logic was unable to prevail. So the car sat for another year unused until we reconvened during this Thanksgiving week and again fought out the details.
During the peak of the argument there was a lot of "I think we should..." and "we should probably..." arguments being thrown around, but nothing really grounded in fact, evidence or automotive research of any kind.
So while everyone was debating in the other room about how to best get the car rolling again, and who should pay to get it moving, I quietly excused myself and drove to AutoZone to get another auto battery (b/c 1 year later of not running it needed another one). I went back, dropped in the new battery, cranked it for 4 seconds, and the car started right up.
Moral of the story: Toyotas are awesome. Family fights are pointless. Car is running again with fresh gas, but at the mechanic for a tune-up just b/c it's been for-god-damn-ever since it drove (and tires need replacing). It'll be in my garage next week
My brother just sold a black 1989 4x4 F350 crew cab 460 auto, SRW, loaded, 140k miles in really good shape. Nice paint/interior, newer motor really needed nothing for 18k. Given what other trucks have been selling for and the rarity of a 1 ton thought it was cheap.It's gotten absolutely crazy. There are decent condition 1990's Ford F-250 with a 460 or 7.3L w/180K on the clock asking $18-$25K. It's more than the thing sold for new, lol.
It's crazy because you can generally find the 1999-2007 F-350 SRW crew cabs with the 7.3L or 6.0L for the sme or less, and they're WAY more capable and comfortable to drive. Some of that has to do with greater numbers of them available, as most of the 87-97 F-series have long since rusted out or have 300K miles on them and are beat to hell. I love some of those 90s trucks but they weren't the greatest for road manners. The late-90s/early-00s had some pretty good advancements in truck ride, cabin design, and handling across all the major brands.My brother just sold a black 1989 4x4 F350 crew cab 460 auto, SRW, loaded, 140k miles in really good shape. Nice paint/interior, newer motor really needed nothing for 18k. Given what other trucks have been selling for and the rarity of a 1 ton thought it was cheap.
It's crazy because you can generally find the 1999-2007 F-350 SRW crew cabs with the 7.3L or 6.0L for the sme or less, and they're WAY more capable and comfortable to drive. Some of that has to do with greater numbers of them available, as most of the 87-97 F-series have long since rusted out or have 300K miles on them and are beat to hell. I love some of those 90s trucks but they weren't the greatest for road manners. The late-90s/early-00s had some pretty good advancements in truck ride, cabin design, and handling across all the major brands.
Still have fond memories of my father's 1990 F-150 XLT Lariat SuperCab with Silver/Black 2-tone paint and a 5.0L.
A couple weeks ago I was offered 20K for my 2005 Duramax/Alison, 3/4 ton, ext cab, 4wd. I paid 29K for it brand new.Classic trucks are getting big money if it's a good runner and cleaned up
A couple weeks ago I was offered 20K for my 2005 Duramax/Alison, 3/4 ton, ext cab, 4wd. I paid 29K for it brand new.
My 04 GMC Sierra had disc brakes all around. 2012 GMC sierra has rear drums.My 17 is much nicer, but in some ways there were things I liked more about that 2004. If I’d bought it as a 4x4 I wouldn’t have sold it, at least not when I did.
My 04 GMC Sierra had disc brakes all around. 2012 GMC sierra has rear drums.
We had an '07 GMC Sierra (07-13 body style) and it also had the rear drums. Rear disc was an option/upgrade. I was just dumbfounded that my '98 F-150 and '08 F-150 were 4-wheel disc, but an SLT GMC truck with leather interior still had rear drums. Now the only thing I own with drum brakes is my boat trailer and technically the parking brake on my Excursion uses the inside of the brake hub like a drum brake, lol.My 04 GMC Sierra had disc brakes all around. 2012 GMC sierra has rear drums.