Jump to content

Jeff Adema

Members
  • Posts

    92
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Reputation

0 Neutral

Retained

  • Member Title
    Sophomore Member

Profile Information

  • First Name
    Jeff
  • Last Name
    Adema
  • Location
    Olds,Alberta
  • Dealership Name
    Mountainview Truck and Trailer Center
  • Interests
    Vintage heavy equipment and vehicles, my kids, backyard agriculture and other revolutionary ideas....
  1. Yes, actually. It's too bad you had such a bad experience, this product is actually quite a high quality item. As far as I know, it's the only 'power enhancement module' available over the parts counter at any auto dealer, with the full blessing of the OEM.
  2. That show was filmed in Dwayne's home country. Talk about middle of nowhere! My wife and I drove past that area en route to a wedding in Winnipeg, I bet you could hear grass grow out there...
  3. Whenever I see trucks like that, (and around here they're plentiful), I have a powerful desire to deliver a well-deserved smack in the head to the chump behind the wheel. My rage increases with my age.....
  4. hmmm, you're in Dauphin, I'd bet the offending party would be the DDC/MBE/Allison dealer in Winnipeg, right?? Been there, done that, worked for them. Wanna know what I think of them? Huh? Huh? I shouldn't jump to conclusions, I know. But it all has a very familiar stink to it.....
  5. An EGR leak should be considered a boost leak, like the allegedly cracked intercooler. Either leak can cause a turbocharger to overspeed, as the turbo has less "resistance" to work against. An overspeed situation can cause the turbo seals to fail and leak, which can be overlooked and misdiagnosed as a base engine failure. I can't point fingers, but I have witnessed such scenarios play out at the dealer level, resulting in unnecessary engine work and dissatisfied customers. Pull off the air inlet and outlet from the turbo compressor, and inspect for excessive shaft radial free play. Sometimes the bearings are fine, but the seals have failed. Either way, oil is fed into the charge-air piping at 30-60psi. If you had a base engine problem resulting in oil consumption, there should have been high crankcase pressure and excessively black oil. Just my thoughts.
  6. Jim, maybe I am nucking futs. But a happy wife (with a spending leash) makes for a happier life. Beer helps, too.
  7. I spoke with the DP of our local dealer last night at the Christmas Eve service, he also runs the mother ship dealer in Airdrie (10 minutes north of Calgary). He's looking for at least one diesel certified tech, in the Airdrie location. It is/was a medium duty dealer, and quite likely the biggest store between Red Deer and Calgary. I have a lot of respect for this man, his family is close to my in-laws, and I would work for him in a heartbeat (but am quite content to stay where I am for now). I don't care to be a go-between, but I can let interested parties know how to contact him. The town is nice, close enough to a city with an airport, major league sports, shopping opportunities for wives, the Rockies are looking over your western fence, warm chinook winds regularly give a welcome break from the cold of winter, low taxes.........seriously, folks.
  8. Merry Christmas to you, Keith, and to everybody else, too.
  9. Not that there's anything wrong with Slave Lake or Grande Prairie, I've actually never visited either locale, but can an objective opinion really be gained from a salesman? Hehe, sorry Jim, I couldn't help myself. I'm in central AB, an hour from Calgary and along the busy and somewhat affluent corridor between Calgary and Edmonton, where life is beautiful all the time. Check out Albertafirst.ca, if I was a little more zippy I'd post the link, but it's not that hard to remember.....one can compare stats and figures between various towns and cities in Alberta. With crude topping $90/barrel the oilpatch is getting a little more intense. Good luck in your quest, I came out over five years ago from southern Ontario and I'll never willingly go back!
  10. Sadly, Jim, this trade is still viewed much the same. And taking the thought processes out of diagnosing and repairing vehicles by automating the diagnosis (or playing the numbers game with most-likely-failed-part-roulette) and turning techs into sub-assembly replacement monkeys is not improving matters. Read Aaron's tag-line, "Keep replacing EGR valve until......." WTF? Makes me wanna squeeze my head in the vice.... I still vividly remember the gasps of despair while in school for automotive, and again in heavy-duty, when the instructors trotted out formulas for power calculations and electricity. "I thought I wasn't gonna hafta do math ever again...."....and a few more duds would drop out and take up landscaping or truck-driving.
  11. Every job must be done right. Those are words to live by.
  12. It is too bad, Bruce. I do miss the verbal slap on the side of my head that you and Damon could deliver in a gracious and informative way. Maybe my kind of antics helped push you and Damon away, who knows.... I do enjoy networking with professionals with real brains and real experience, and it disappoints me as well that the real assets to the repair industry opt to drop out. But I see the same crap happening in my own shop, as real experience and diagnostic efforts are circumvented by ignorance and pride by somebody doing a google search to find a quick answer for a phone-in fix. WTF? Whatever happened to investing in knowledge? I don't profess to be anything special, I'm humble enough to be able to learn from anybody and anything. I absorb and buy all the info I can, but most days it hardly seems to be enough. Maybe I just had a bad week.....
  13. Sounds like a relatively easy fix. Easy is good. How's the back doing lately?
  14. I've info at work (Cat SIS and ET, plus various hardcopies), but I'd venture to say in that truck there's likely a two-wire Deutch-style gray rectangular connector in or near the T-stat housing for Cat's coolant temp sensor, but the Ford dash is likely reading off of a separate sensor near the Cat unit. If I'm right, it's a two-pin thermistor with a connector that should look familiar to you in Ford-land. This isn't an F-series is it? It's an L isn't it, the precursor to the Sterling atrocities!
  15. I don't know why they'd say possible change of water pump, but apparently this stuff doesn't need to be pressurized the way water-based coolants need to be, as the boiling point is higher than most engines' operating range, hence the switch of rad caps. Maybe they're trying to flog their own brand of pumps, rads, etc.
×
×
  • Create New...