This sounds familiar, I just pulled off one of these kind of stunts, the secret was driving a tiny little car ('91 mercury capri ) and having a loading dock on the other end. I put my car on the back of this 1964 F-600 with an oak Obeco grain body and made a mad dash for home. I left at the standard time, (too early o'clock 3:00 a.m.) did not sleep a wink that night either. 600 miles out, spent 2 hours at the dealer, left around 4:30 P.M., 800 some miles later and about 2:00 P.M. the next day I was home, and one tired individual, 34 hours straight on no sleep prior. All the while, running on battery power, alternator was shot, think I had a bad ground and the voltage regulator shot, must have been that regulator allowing whatever trickle of voltage the alternator had left to offer pass by unchecked, and actually keep it going, as theoretically I should have broken down, say in Toledo at around midnight in a not so good neighborhood just off the highway where I got fuel, or at least in between service areas in the dark as would usually be my luck LOL - well not really, I am very thankful for all the trips I made so far in life with no incidents. Now the irritating thing about this was that I paid the dealer an extra $200 to service the the truck, and although others can find me intense in regards to details sometimes, I sent him a detailed grocery list of items to either service or check and or lube. What I got for the extra cost was, they flushed the rear, and transmission, re-filled with 90 wt., then changed the motor oil, greased, and flushed and changed the coolant, seems to be all. Knowing it came off a farm in Illinois, and not sure how long it sat prior to, I thought it good practice to flush the rear and the transmission, 800 miles or even the 250 miles you need to run is a lot of abuse without fresh lube, especially if you look at an expanded view of a rear, a few bearings in there etc. and I'd hate to have to work on one, have something fail or get noisy in there. You may find a substantial amount of water to drain off, from condensation. This dealer must have been tight on $$, as I left the place with the above electrical problem, one tire with a substantial leak, 24 hours and it's flat, and a leaking seal on the rear, with 800 miles to go. That's the difference between some people, if I was the seller, these items would have been taken care of, maybe adjust the price to cover some of it, but making sure it was right would be important to me as a seller, this guy struck me as a do the bare minimum type. Funny thing was I was loaded with tools and especially electrical repair, had my meter and supplies, wish I took a reading and busted his chops a little, it was a clean $100 in parts/labor to fix, which I just did with some help from people here. Had this been a private seller, I think it'd be different, more on the as is / buyer beware, side. I expect a dealer to do the right thing, that's his business to do so, the guy has a nice shop on the premises, on site mechanics, really no excuse, oh well, when I'm done, I'll have a nice running truck that did not cost much and will pay for itself before the year is out. I've also got another suprise, when they changed the oil, they replaced the drain plug and covered the plug with silicone, now I wonder what that is all about ? I'll let him off on the cracked manifold port, it got louder the closer I got towards home. Allen, I'd make sure that the fluids are fresh if this one sat, check the brakes out, really give it a once over, might save you some headaches or unecessary wear that you might see the effects of right away. I came loaded for bear when I go this one, and was fortunate to make it home without incident, 34 hours non-stop, well I did get one nap in, right before the sun came up with about 6 hours left on the home stretch ! The fun part was, I had not been in anything this old since I was a kid, felt like the good old days of trucking, old truck aroma, manual steering, sure ran great and held the road, no front end problems, drove great, and that old seat ( I added a chair cushion was all ) was comfortable, I thought I was in for a hell ride at first, it was interesting. The dealer took the front off a burned up flatbed trailer, took the axles off, made some steel framework and put that side up high for a ramp, I drove my car up to it and asked the guy who was helping what he thought, "60 m.p.h. and I should clear the headboard right?", got him laughing at least, if you can find a way to get a small vehicle up onto it, you can make an earthen ramp at home or some stout ramps braced up or something, I had an area carved out at home that will be a loading dock soon, so I heaped up some fill there, raised the bed up, ( being a dump body helps big time ) put some blocking under my car ramps and I got it off the truck no problem, not a fan of little cars but this overweight roller skate sure did the trick.
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