Texas82GP's Roadmaster

Yeah, I haven't been taking the time to post much lately. I've stayed very busy though. To update on the Roadmaster, I can't remember when the last time was that I had the car out and put some miles on it. It was last inspected on 11/27/22 and it had 111,949 miles on the clock. I got it inspected yesterday (12/19/23) and the odometer showed 112,390 so 441 miles in a little over a year. It's done a lot of sitting.

Back in September, my brother and I were at the storage to construct a wooden rack to store all of our empty boxes. We saved virtually every cardboard box that came to the house for over a year. Then when Dad moved from Spring to Willis, he and his wife bought a lot of boxes from U-Haul. We (my brother, sister-in-law and I) split the cost of those boxes with Dad in half, and we took the boxes for our move. It's a lot of boxes. I'll have to snap a picture for you guys. We have the boxes we need to move from Spring to Huntsville/New Waverly in late 2024 or early 2025. We're storing them between the Roadmaster and the Grand Prix. There are so many, we needed to build a rack so we could go vertical with the box storage.

Anyway, I wanted to pull the car out to give us room behind it to work. It was under the cover, on the battery tender, as it always is. The tender showed the battery fully charged. The car was as dead as a stump. Sean and I just pushed it out, did our work and pushed it back in. The weather was still very hot that day. We had a really hot summer here this year. At the end of our project, I yanked the battery out to take with us, charge and have tested. It tested bad. It was a Deka Intimidator that I bought from Rock Auto. It turned out it had a few months of warranty left on it. Rock Auto was really great about it. They shipped me a new battery and sold me a shipping label for about $25 to ship the defective battery back. It took some time but otherwise, I was looking at $250 + tax to buy another Group 78 AGM. I chose to be patient for the cost-effective solution.

It wasn't until early October that I got back out to the storage and put the new battery in the car. After I did, the car fired right up like I had just driven it. I'm sure it had been sitting for at least six months at that point. The circumstances weren't good for me to get the car out at that time, so it went back on the tender and back under the cover.

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Last Sunday was Dad's birthday. Our family met at a restaurant out there in Willis, near his house, to celebrate that evening. I left my house early in the afternoon to get the car out and put the truck in the storage. The car fired right up like I had just driven it. I aired up the tires and checked the transmission fluid level. The transmission leaks when the car sits for a prolonged period. It only leaks when it sits. I guess the converter bleeds down and then fluid dribbles out the shift shaft seal.

I went over to Dad's to spend some time with him before his birthday dinner. When I got there, I checked the transmission fluid level again as now the unit was at least warm. When putting the dipstick back in, it broke at the window at the top of the full range and the bottom inch or so of it fell down the tube and dropped in the pan. I thought it was stuck in the tube at the time as I couldn't get the dipstick back in. This was pretty aggravating. We celebrated dad's birthday and I drove the car home as planned. It ran flawlessly. I took it to the office on Monday. Monday night, I worked on the transmission dipstick dilemma. I started with my inspection camera and I thought I could see the broken piece lodged in the tube. I fought it for 30 minutes or so with a claw type pick-up tool and a bent coat hanger. It was a bit frustrating. I got to looking at it again with the camera and it looks to me like there is a weld bubble protruding into the tube where the bracket that ties the tube to the cylinder head is welded on. I don't know if this is bad quality from the factory or a bad repair. It turns out that the blunt end of the remains (the majority) of the dipstick, with it's sharp corners at the break was hitting this obsticle and preventing the dipstick to go back in. I rounded off the end of the broken dipstick on the bench grinder and managed to get it back in. I then checked the level and added until I just had fluid on the bottom tip of the stick, as it is broken at the top of the range. I felt better about it at that point, put everything up and called it an evening.

Tuesday morning, I was able to buy a new, genuine GM dipstick to replace mine. Unfortunately, the tube has been discontinued. I have it as a saved search and I'm watching the yards for an LT1 Caprice, Fleetwood or Roadmaster to snag another tube off of. I want to see if it has the same flaw that mine has in it. If it does, then I guess it isn't a flaw but I can't imagine what I'm seeing should be there. The transmission dipstick has always been a little tough to get back in on this car. I'm undecided whether or not I'm going to put the new dipstick in the old tube or not. I've ordered a Wix filter and gasket kit for the transmission but for now, the broken end of the dipstick is riding around in the pan.

I drove the car to work again Tuesday. I got it inspected and then I renewed the registration online. It had expired at the end of November. On the way home, I stopped at a local washateria and washed the car's cover in the biggest washing machine I've ever seen....

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The machine claims to be capable of handling 8 loads of laundry at once. I don't doubt it. It easily washed that car cover. The 80lb dryer dried it in about 10 minutes. It was a good experience. The cover was just really dusty and putting it on the clean car made the car not clean anymore. When I got home Tuesday night, I gave the car a wash....

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I'll drive it to work today (Wednesday). After work, I plan to either change the oil or drain and refill the cooling system. I may do both but with that few miles on the oil change, I tend to feel it needs the cooling system drained and refilled more. It's been almost four years since I had the intake and water pump off of it and refilled the system with long life coolant. I'll drive it work again on Thursday and then I'll put it to bed Thursday night. It's going to be rainy here Friday through Christmas, maybe even on Monday so I want get the clean car and clean cover put away.

On the one hand, I hate how much this car sits around but on the other, I love that I saved the car from a likely bad end and that it isn't deteriorating the way I have it stored. The car is running flawlessly and the good news is I have some work lined up for it this year. It will get the exercise taking me to east and north central Texas for work and will make me milage while doing it. It will be easier to occasionally use the car when we move and it's sitting out in our shop instead of at a storage 30 miles away from my home.

I guess that's the story for now friends. Thanks for the interest. If I don't say so to you guys before then, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and your loved ones.
 
Yeah, I haven't been taking the time to post much lately. I've stayed very busy though. To update on the Roadmaster, I can't remember when the last time was that I had the car out and put some miles on it. It was last inspected on 11/27/22 and it had 111,949 miles on the clock. I got it inspected yesterday (12/19/23) and the odometer showed 112,390 so 441 miles in a little over a year. It's done a lot of sitting.

Back in September, my brother and I were at the storage to construct a wooden rack to store all of our empty boxes. We saved virtually every cardboard box that came to the house for over a year. Then when Dad moved from Spring to Willis, he and his wife bought a lot of boxes from U-Haul. We (my brother, sister-in-law and I) split the cost of those boxes with Dad in half, and we took the boxes for our move. It's a lot of boxes. I'll have to snap a picture for you guys. We have the boxes we need to move from Spring to Huntsville/New Waverly in late 2024 or early 2025. We're storing them between the Roadmaster and the Grand Prix. There are so many, we needed to build a rack so we could go vertical with the box storage.

Anyway, I wanted to pull the car out to give us room behind it to work. It was under the cover, on the battery tender, as it always is. The tender showed the battery fully charged. The car was as dead as a stump. Sean and I just pushed it out, did our work and pushed it back in. The weather was still very hot that day. We had a really hot summer here this year. At the end of our project, I yanked the battery out to take with us, charge and have tested. It tested bad. It was a Deka Intimidator that I bought from Rock Auto. It turned out it had a few months of warranty left on it. Rock Auto was really great about it. They shipped me a new battery and sold me a shipping label for about $25 to ship the defective battery back. It took some time but otherwise, I was looking at $250 + tax to buy another Group 78 AGM. I chose to be patient for the cost-effective solution.

It wasn't until early October that I got back out to the storage and put the new battery in the car. After I did, the car fired right up like I had just driven it. I'm sure it had been sitting for at least six months at that point. The circumstances weren't good for me to get the car out at that time, so it went back on the tender and back under the cover.

View attachment 232594

Last Sunday was Dad's birthday. Our family met at a restaurant out there in Willis, near his house, to celebrate that evening. I left my house early in the afternoon to get the car out and put the truck in the storage. The car fired right up like I had just driven it. I aired up the tires and checked the transmission fluid level. The transmission leaks when the car sits for a prolonged period. It only leaks when it sits. I guess the converter bleeds down and then fluid dribbles out the shift shaft seal.

I went over to Dad's to spend some time with him before his birthday dinner. When I got there, I checked the transmission fluid level again as now the unit was at least warm. When putting the dipstick back in, it broke at the window at the top of the full range and the bottom inch or so of it fell down the tube and dropped in the pan. I thought it was stuck in the tube at the time as I couldn't get the dipstick back in. This was pretty aggravating. We celebrated dad's birthday and I drove the car home as planned. It ran flawlessly. I took it to the office on Monday. Monday night, I worked on the transmission dipstick dilemma. I started with my inspection camera and I thought I could see the broken piece lodged in the tube. I fought it for 30 minutes or so with a claw type pick-up tool and a bent coat hanger. It was a bit frustrating. I got to looking at it again with the camera and it looks to me like there is a weld bubble protruding into the tube where the bracket that ties the tube to the cylinder head is welded on. I don't know if this is bad quality from the factory or a bad repair. It turns out that the blunt end of the remains (the majority) of the dipstick, with it's sharp corners at the break was hitting this obsticle and preventing the dipstick to go back in. I rounded off the end of the broken dipstick on the bench grinder and managed to get it back in. I then checked the level and added until I just had fluid on the bottom tip of the stick, as it is broken at the top of the range. I felt better about it at that point, put everything up and called it an evening.

Tuesday morning, I was able to buy a new, genuine GM dipstick to replace mine. Unfortunately, the tube has been discontinued. I have it as a saved search and I'm watching the yards for an LT1 Caprice, Fleetwood or Roadmaster to snag another tube off of. I want to see if it has the same flaw that mine has in it. If it does, then I guess it isn't a flaw but I can't imagine what I'm seeing should be there. The transmission dipstick has always been a little tough to get back in on this car. I'm undecided whether or not I'm going to put the new dipstick in the old tube or not. I've ordered a Wix filter and gasket kit for the transmission but for now, the broken end of the dipstick is riding around in the pan.

I drove the car to work again Tuesday. I got it inspected and then I renewed the registration online. It had expired at the end of November. On the way home, I stopped at a local washateria and washed the car's cover in the biggest washing machine I've ever seen....

View attachment 232595

The machine claims to be capable of handling 8 loads of laundry at once. I don't doubt it. It easily washed that car cover. The 80lb dryer dried it in about 10 minutes. It was a good experience. The cover was just really dusty and putting it on the clean car made the car not clean anymore. When I got home Tuesday night, I gave the car a wash....

View attachment 232596

I'll drive it to work today (Wednesday). After work, I plan to either change the oil or drain and refill the cooling system. I may do both but with that few miles on the oil change, I tend to feel it needs the cooling system drained and refilled more. It's been almost four years since I had the intake and water pump off of it and refilled the system with long life coolant. I'll drive it work again on Thursday and then I'll put it to bed Thursday night. It's going to be rainy here Friday through Christmas, maybe even on Monday so I want get the clean car and clean cover put away.

On the one hand, I hate how much this car sits around but on the other, I love that I saved the car from a likely bad end and that it isn't deteriorating the way I have it stored. The car is running flawlessly and the good news is I have some work lined up for it this year. It will get the exercise taking me to east and north central Texas for work and will make me milage while doing it. It will be easier to occasionally use the car when we move and it's sitting out in our shop instead of at a storage 30 miles away from my home.

I guess that's the story for now friends. Thanks for the interest. If I don't say so to you guys before then, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and your loved ones.

Similar to my (first world) plight, having all my crap out at a hangar 20 minutes from my house.
 
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I found a few pictures of the box rack and the boxes I referred to in my previous post. Here you go....
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I think we're set. I put the car up this afternoon. I'm not feeling that great so I don't have an oil change or coolant drain/refill in me tonight. I don't expect to feel better tomorrow so I just got it put up and covered ahead of the rain while it's clean.
 
They just did a full remodel/refit of the laundromat in town. I'll have to stop in and see if they have a jumbo washer. My cover is so dusty that it's just been stuffed in a Hefty bag in the trunk.

Rest up and feel better.
 
They just did a full remodel/refit of the laundromat in town. I'll have to stop in and see if they have a jumbo washer. My cover is so dusty that it's just been stuffed in a Hefty bag in the trunk.

Rest up and feel better.
Thanks. Yeah, the big machine is key. The first time I washed the cover, I did it here at home and it was waaaay too big for our machine. The cover is really a little too big for the car but that machine may have been able to handle two of them. Don't make my mistake and put too much soap (I put two small cap fulls from a small bottle of Gain). It's just dusty. You don't need much soap at all.
 
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Keeping the thread unlocked. Not too much to report. I've taken the car on several trips for work this year. I made a trip to Gunter, TX, which is north of Dallas, nearly at the Oklahoma border. I made four trips to McLendon-Chisholm, TX which is 50 miles east of Dallas. I made three trips to Crandall, TX, which is about 25 miles southeast of Dallas. That might be it so far.

One of the trips to McLendon-Chisholm, when I got to my storage to get the car out, the battery was dead. This was a one-year-old Deka Intimidator that Rock Auto provided as a warranty replacement for the nearly three-year-old unit that failed. Combined, I got four years out of two batteries. Not great. I'm blaming the Battery Tender that I had in the storage. It's a little different than the units that Sean and Dad are using for the Camaro and Galaxie and they're having great luck with them. The one I had didn't show an AGM setting and showed Lithium Ion instead, so perhaps I bought the wrong tender several years ago.

Not wanting to pull the door closed and leave the car (it needed to be driven and is a much better ride on long trips than the truck), I went to the local O'Reilly and bought a Group 78 AGM Super Start Platinum. It was about $300 out the door but it was the best I could do on the timeline I was on. The upside is, if there is a warranty event, it will be convenient to get it addressed.

I got back to the storage, swapped the battery and then started checking/adjusting the air pressure in the tires. When I got to the right rear (last one), it was completely flat. Again, not wanting to leave the car behind, I started moving stuff so I could get back there and air it up. I went up fine. I told myself "It must have something in it. It's probably a slow leak. I'll check it when I pull into Trinity." Well, I got overconfident and drove through Trinity. The next small town on State Highway 19 is Lovelady. The first substantial building and parking lot coming into town from the southwest is the local bank. I pulled in and checked the right rear. Not good. 18 psi. My full-size spare was basically flat as well. I drove a few blocks further up the highway into town, to Lovelady tire. I've driven past the place many times. They were very friendly and helpful. Small town service. It turned out the valve stem was leaking at the wheel. They replaced the stem and got me back on the road.

On the next trip to McLendon-Chisholm, a few weeks later, I got to the storage, and all was well. I drove all the way to the hotel in Terrell. Then drove from there to the City Hall in McLendon-Chisholm for the 6PM City Council meeting (attendance of this meeting was the purposed of my trip). The meeting ran long. I probably went to leave at about 8 PM. When I did, I found the right front to be flat. "What the hell?" I put the spare on it and headed back to the hotel. Got on the road the next morning and on the way back, stoppped in at Lovelady tire to have them look at the flat. Again, the valve stem was leaking at the wheel. They replaced the stem, and I got on my way. On the way back to the storage, I stopped at Dad's. I swapped the right front back on, stowed the spare and gave the car a pretty detailed hand wash.

For the first time in a few years, I scrubbed the whitewalls with red Scotch Brite and Westley's Bleach White. In cleaning each tire, I jacked up that corner of the car so I could spin the tire and scrub all of it. After the car was clean and dry, I went tire by tire and jacked up that corner of the car to apply the tire dressing. It's the most detailed I've done the hubcaps/tires on the car to date.

I watch some videos on YouTube every now and then that a truck driver posts. He's pretty fanatical about his truck being clean and he likes to use Mop-And-Glow for his tire dressing. He says it is long lasting, doesn't wash off and the dirt and dust won't stick to it. I went ahead and gave that a try. Pics below.

I looked at the date codes on the tires and they are from 2015. They are smooth, have good tread and no weather checking so I don't have any intention of replacing them now. Maybe after we get moved and settled in at the new house/shop. I'm not sure what's going on with the valve stems. Maybe they are poor quality or just getting old, or both. The old-timer at Lovelady tire blamed the hubcaps. I don't put a lot of stock in that. I'm very careful when I put the hubcaps on. I was at the storage yesterday. All four tires are still up. I have to run up to Corsicana (about 55 miles south of Dallas) for a meeting Thursday afternoon. I'll be taking the car to get it some exercise and for it to make me some mileage. We'll see how it does. I guess that's it for now friends. Here are some pics from Dad's after the last wash/tire detail and one back at the storage before I put it up. It hasn't been out since (6-8 weeks).

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I'm surprised (sort of) that the tire shop would touch 9 year old tires. I know Discount won't, and have heard other chains won't either. You're going to replace the other stems though, right?

The tire shop I usually use replaces stems every time they put a new tire on.

The little guys on the side of the road are awesome, I had Chika's Tire Repair in Hereford TX fix one for me last year after discount told me no. Got another year out of it with no issues until it took an arrowhead shaped rock right in the center of the tread. That dang Renegade of the wife's has given me more tire drama than pretty much every other car combined.
 
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I'm surprised (sort of) that the tire shop would touch 9 year old tires. I know Discount won't, and have heard other chains won't either. You're going to replace the other stems though, right?

The tire shop I usually use replaces stems every time they put a new tire on.

The little guys on the side of the road are awesome, I had Chika's Tire Repair in Hereford TX fix one for me last year after discount told me no. Got another year out of it with no issues until it took an arrowhead shaped rock right in the center of the tread. That dang Renegade of the wife's has given me more tire drama than pretty much every other car combined.
Yeah, this is a small town, mom and pop place. It's an old two bay service station. They didn't say anything about the date code. Based on feedback from the previous owner, I was thinking the tires were replaced in 2019, and maybe they were, with old stock. The tires have no visible defects and run down the road smoothly, so I don't see a really good reason to replace them, just because they are old. The car sits in the dark 90+% of the time, in the storage. The tires have lots of tread left. When we get settled and expenditures in a thousand directions calms down, I will probably give the car a new set of tires. It certainly is deserving.

I do plan to have the other two valve stems replaced. I haven't had a chance yet. I have new valve stems in the trunk of the car as well as a full sized spare and everything needed to change the tire. I watch the tire pressures closely. I couldn't see any visible defect in the two stems that have been replaced. Including the spare, three of the five stems are new.

I've had many good and bad experiences at the big chain tire stores. More good than bad, but plenty of bad. I prefer to stay off of the interstate and give my business to the smaller, local shops and restaurants. My two experiences at Lovelady tire were great.
 

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