Mine isn't quite that good but it quickens the warm up process by a couple minutes. Truck seldom gets really toasty inside. Not sure it's a thermostat problem or something else as the temp gauge takes forever to come up to the bottom of "warm".basketcase0302 wrote:Don't know how ya'll cope with it Jamie, (the cold) as I have ice on my barn roof down here this morning brrr!
I was so...glad I'd put the 110V engine heater in my last bump as i walk out in 10 degree weather there in TN and have instant defrost and heat the second I started the truck, (not to mention how much easier the starts were).
Is there no way to add an engine heater to the 6BT engine?
Fleabay has so...many of them listed. I believe I got mine for around $40, (metal freeze plug style) but looked hard at the inline hose type.
edit: awesome job on the garage door! It was on my list if I stayed there in Chattanooga-real glad i didn't have to figure out how to manually lift it by myself!
Spent some time out in the wilds yesterday scavenging some washer nozzle from the junkyard in burr cold weather. Felt good to be out but they have scrapped most of the trucks and said they are closing that side out. Got home, and for $17 I had replacement nozzles and new hose. Roued everything and got ready to mount the tank before realising the electrical connection wasn't "right". Seems Ford changed from the late 60's stand alone pump to the internal pump and hadn't updated the wiring in '70 (which is the build date on my harness). So now I need to find a short adapter harness to hook up the pump. My '69 Mustang harness has the correct pump connector but it's hard wired into the harness. I know I have the harness, just don't remember where it went. After a night of snow, sleet and rain I don't think I have it in me to go searching the '70's cars for a connector.
While out in the yard I did find a '68ish F-350 with a factor Ford stake bed that was in decent shape. Thinking about making an offer on it since my diamond plate one's surface is too rough to dump and it's so light it pounds going over bumps. Little things.