Dejure
Junior Member
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2025
- Posts
- 10
- Reaction score
- 22
- Location
- Eastern Washington
- First Name
- Kelly
- Truck Year
- 1978
- Truck Model
- C15
- Engine Size
- 350
Keep in mind, I've only had this truck a few days, so I don't know what surprises the previous two owners left for me.
At the time of purchase, I was only given a single door and ignition key. Yesterday, my work on my new driver was limited to going to what passes for town here, five miles away. There, a friend owns a hardware store. He had the ignition key blanks, but the door keys, not so much.
Today, I started tackling electrical issues. I started with simple ones - non-working lights. To that end, I opened the driver's side door, so I could access the ignition and light controls. Things went well, and I was down to the last marker and park light, on the passenger side.
Inasmuch as it was an hour of fiddling in, I started the truck, to bring the battery back up. I came back around to turn the right signal on. Because the truck is near a short, rock wall, I pushed the driver's door closed, to get to access the turns and park lights. Though the door was UNLOCKED, it wouldn't open.
CRAP. The truck was running, I hadn't unlocked the passenger side, and I had no key for the passenger door, aside from the one in the ignition. PANIC
I tried a bit of the REALLY strong wire used to support tree branches in the orchards surrounding me. Not a chance.
Oh, and it was a full tank of gas of gas. So, it could be days before things wound down. Meanwhile, the HOA would, probably, have me deported to someplace I've never been.
Anyone who knows alternators knows, disconnecting the battery does nothing, aside from, possibly, killing the alternator, which thinks the open equates to a WAY dead battery needing a lot of amps, as it keeps suppling the coil with electrons.
Did you know the twin size bed sheet you have in your shop, as a rag, bunched up and pressed over a four barrel will not shut off enough air to kill the engine (maybe if I cut it up and let it fill each cylinder. . . .(I sent a full, red mechanics rag through a John Deere once))?
Grabbing an HEI seemed out of the question (even if I could con the wife into doing it, she might have just acted as a resistor and I might only have gotten nothing but a bit poorer performance, in more ways than one).
[MORE PANIC AND SWEAT]
It ran through my mind I might need a CO2 fire extinguisher (yes, I went to the cringeworthy thought of grabbing a powder one, but I wasn't fully ready to hate this truck, yet).
Then I remembered I have a CO2 tank I keep in the shop, to charge water bottles, so I can make my own carbonated water, cider or what have you. I [we all] know, CO2 makes a good fire extinguisher, because it displaces oxygen, and doesn't leave any mess.
That CO2 tank is small, very portable, and comes with a 6' charging hose. Accordingly, I packed it out to the truck, opened the main valve, held the hose over the carb, and opened the charging valve.
The effect was, almost, immediate. The truck started running slower and slower. Then just quit.
SMILE What a relief.
I went back to the house and pulled up pages on breaking into my own truck. A bit of paracord and a slip knot later and I was back in the truck.
You have no idea as to how amazing that was. Suffice it to say, I may hold the record for time served as a Tenderfoot because of, well, knots.
The driver's door opened from the inside just fine. Once open, I removed the window crank (glad I didn't get rid of that that clip removal tool sometime in the 40 or so years since I sold my old 69), then the panel.
With the panel off, it's obvious the linkage came off. The previous owner, probably, didn't bother with the retainer.
TOMORROW, we go to a real town, an hour away, and I'll get four more door keys. One, along with an ignition key, will go into the usual secret hiddy-hole nylon key holder for such emergencies.
At the time of purchase, I was only given a single door and ignition key. Yesterday, my work on my new driver was limited to going to what passes for town here, five miles away. There, a friend owns a hardware store. He had the ignition key blanks, but the door keys, not so much.
Today, I started tackling electrical issues. I started with simple ones - non-working lights. To that end, I opened the driver's side door, so I could access the ignition and light controls. Things went well, and I was down to the last marker and park light, on the passenger side.
Inasmuch as it was an hour of fiddling in, I started the truck, to bring the battery back up. I came back around to turn the right signal on. Because the truck is near a short, rock wall, I pushed the driver's door closed, to get to access the turns and park lights. Though the door was UNLOCKED, it wouldn't open.
CRAP. The truck was running, I hadn't unlocked the passenger side, and I had no key for the passenger door, aside from the one in the ignition. PANIC
I tried a bit of the REALLY strong wire used to support tree branches in the orchards surrounding me. Not a chance.
Oh, and it was a full tank of gas of gas. So, it could be days before things wound down. Meanwhile, the HOA would, probably, have me deported to someplace I've never been.
Anyone who knows alternators knows, disconnecting the battery does nothing, aside from, possibly, killing the alternator, which thinks the open equates to a WAY dead battery needing a lot of amps, as it keeps suppling the coil with electrons.
Did you know the twin size bed sheet you have in your shop, as a rag, bunched up and pressed over a four barrel will not shut off enough air to kill the engine (maybe if I cut it up and let it fill each cylinder. . . .(I sent a full, red mechanics rag through a John Deere once))?
Grabbing an HEI seemed out of the question (even if I could con the wife into doing it, she might have just acted as a resistor and I might only have gotten nothing but a bit poorer performance, in more ways than one).
[MORE PANIC AND SWEAT]
It ran through my mind I might need a CO2 fire extinguisher (yes, I went to the cringeworthy thought of grabbing a powder one, but I wasn't fully ready to hate this truck, yet).
Then I remembered I have a CO2 tank I keep in the shop, to charge water bottles, so I can make my own carbonated water, cider or what have you. I [we all] know, CO2 makes a good fire extinguisher, because it displaces oxygen, and doesn't leave any mess.
That CO2 tank is small, very portable, and comes with a 6' charging hose. Accordingly, I packed it out to the truck, opened the main valve, held the hose over the carb, and opened the charging valve.
The effect was, almost, immediate. The truck started running slower and slower. Then just quit.
SMILE What a relief.
I went back to the house and pulled up pages on breaking into my own truck. A bit of paracord and a slip knot later and I was back in the truck.
You have no idea as to how amazing that was. Suffice it to say, I may hold the record for time served as a Tenderfoot because of, well, knots.
The driver's door opened from the inside just fine. Once open, I removed the window crank (glad I didn't get rid of that that clip removal tool sometime in the 40 or so years since I sold my old 69), then the panel.
With the panel off, it's obvious the linkage came off. The previous owner, probably, didn't bother with the retainer.
TOMORROW, we go to a real town, an hour away, and I'll get four more door keys. One, along with an ignition key, will go into the usual secret hiddy-hole nylon key holder for such emergencies.
Last edited: