cynicwanderer
Member
I'm trying to collect spare parts for my 94 Ford Diesel Van for traveling back country. The idea is to have enough parts to make it out to safety. I travel in Nevada and plan to do some traveling in Baja.
I had my van for five years and in those years have gotten some experience about what failures will stop me in my tracks and which are survivable and get me home. This discussion has some general items, but also specific items to Ford diesel and van suspension.
At first, I had assumed that this being a diesel van, it would be a show stopper to have anything go wrong with injection system or glow plugs. However, since this beast has a mechanical injection pump, it turns out to not be the Achilles heel. it will run even with leaky/cracked injection lines.
But here is a list of failures that have left me stranded so far. luckily these failures happened in front of my house or at work...
1. starter failure
since this van is automatic transmission, it cannot be bump started. once the starter is out, we're stopped. eventually I plan to convert it to manual transmission, but that's another story project in progress.
2. battery failure
similar to starter failure, but at least it can be jumped by another vehicle... also, I plan to add a isolated "house" battery (a third battery), which can be used to jumper or replace a starter battery. It needs two batteries to cold start. if one fails you can disconnect it at one of the terminals (negative) and if it's not too cold outside, you can jump start it with the good battery and make it home, but it will not cold start when it's below 20F or so.
3. starter relay failure
this is a ford, the ford starter relay has big terminal studs and can be "by-passed" with screw driver across terminals to start.
3. belt tensioner failure
since it has a serpentine belt, any failure of pulleys and the tensioner will cause the water pump to stop and over heat. you can drive for a short while (maybe a mile) to get to a safe place. even though I carry a spare belt, the tensioner failure caught me by surprise, since I would have expected it to make some noise before failing. not, so, the spring assembly decided it had enough and exploded spewing pieces of cast aluminium.
Here is a partial list that I have started for this van:
- isolated house battery (to run radios, inverters and sever as spare)
- starter
- alternator
- misc. electrical parts, like relays, fuses, jumper wire, etc...
- manual shift lever position sensor (it's a ford E4OD thing)
- belt, belt tensioner, idler pulley, AC by-pass pulley
- coolant hoses
- vacuum pump
- universal joints
- brake pads/shoes
Here are some parts I'm considering. I have not had these failures and I don't have any experience on how likely failures would be. I.e. never had any of these fail on any vehicle without some advance warning (like leaky master/slave brake cylinders, water pump seal, etc.). I know a broken axle shaft would stop me and there would be no warning.
- spare axle shafts (has floating axle)
- brake hoses
- master brake cylinder
- front caliper(s)
- water pump
- power steering pump.
what do you think ? what other items do you carry...
I had my van for five years and in those years have gotten some experience about what failures will stop me in my tracks and which are survivable and get me home. This discussion has some general items, but also specific items to Ford diesel and van suspension.
At first, I had assumed that this being a diesel van, it would be a show stopper to have anything go wrong with injection system or glow plugs. However, since this beast has a mechanical injection pump, it turns out to not be the Achilles heel. it will run even with leaky/cracked injection lines.
But here is a list of failures that have left me stranded so far. luckily these failures happened in front of my house or at work...
1. starter failure
since this van is automatic transmission, it cannot be bump started. once the starter is out, we're stopped. eventually I plan to convert it to manual transmission, but that's another story project in progress.
2. battery failure
similar to starter failure, but at least it can be jumped by another vehicle... also, I plan to add a isolated "house" battery (a third battery), which can be used to jumper or replace a starter battery. It needs two batteries to cold start. if one fails you can disconnect it at one of the terminals (negative) and if it's not too cold outside, you can jump start it with the good battery and make it home, but it will not cold start when it's below 20F or so.
3. starter relay failure
this is a ford, the ford starter relay has big terminal studs and can be "by-passed" with screw driver across terminals to start.
3. belt tensioner failure
since it has a serpentine belt, any failure of pulleys and the tensioner will cause the water pump to stop and over heat. you can drive for a short while (maybe a mile) to get to a safe place. even though I carry a spare belt, the tensioner failure caught me by surprise, since I would have expected it to make some noise before failing. not, so, the spring assembly decided it had enough and exploded spewing pieces of cast aluminium.
Here is a partial list that I have started for this van:
- isolated house battery (to run radios, inverters and sever as spare)
- starter
- alternator
- misc. electrical parts, like relays, fuses, jumper wire, etc...
- manual shift lever position sensor (it's a ford E4OD thing)
- belt, belt tensioner, idler pulley, AC by-pass pulley
- coolant hoses
- vacuum pump
- universal joints
- brake pads/shoes
Here are some parts I'm considering. I have not had these failures and I don't have any experience on how likely failures would be. I.e. never had any of these fail on any vehicle without some advance warning (like leaky master/slave brake cylinders, water pump seal, etc.). I know a broken axle shaft would stop me and there would be no warning.
- spare axle shafts (has floating axle)
- brake hoses
- master brake cylinder
- front caliper(s)
- water pump
- power steering pump.
what do you think ? what other items do you carry...