Pictures of my nephew’s truck, my trailer and load. 250 mi one way run. Truck handled the trailer and load easily; however, running loaded in 6th gear produced a head splitting drone for the front seat passenger so I was forced to run 5th when loaded. Otherwise it was really quiet in the cab, lot better than my ‘99 Cummins. View attachment 139370View attachment 139371
I have been in the 30-32,000 gross in the past. Used to be we hauled corn with GN trailers, that was a workout. Think I saw 33,000 once. Glad that phase of life is over. Any heavy hauling I do from now on will likely be occasional. Even so, I dislike the 5 speed ratios even running around empty.
They are a big trailer built like a backwards parachute but boy I would love to have one . My big gmc only gets 5 mpg so even at 9 that’s a quite bit better . Only time I ever got that low mileage was running 85 on the interstate at about only 20,000 pounds but I kept it right to the floor for 8 hours round tripWe had two grain trailers back then. One was a Donahue (16 foot maybe?) with a hoist type box, held around 300 bu. My brother pulled it with his ’97 2500 Cummins, automatic. The other was a Killbros 350 dual center dump box on a short stout Redi Haul trailer. It was good for 325 bu usually. I pulled that one. The few times I kept track of fuel use I found I averaged 8mpg over the whole tank. 50% of miles were loaded. Didn’t help that the box was kind of tall and wide, had the aero of a parachute. When I drug a CIH MX170 halfway across the US I averaged 9 mpg and that was just as heavy and 100% loaded miles LOL!
Any comments about putting a stock size input shaft back in? If the input shaft size is increased what becomes the next weak link? I’m running at 300 engine hp presumably.
In this situation the only thing “better” is the closer gear ratios of the 6 speed. This NV4500 can clearly handle the power. The ONLY reason it failed was a lack of oil and I will be impressed if you can show me a 6 speed that will survive that.Either fix it as cheap as possible to sell and replace truck - or do it right and replace the transmission with a better unit. Stringing band-aid's together is nonsens.
Jm2c
Of all the NV4500 I had that failed (12) none broke the input shaft. I dynoed 313/756
Dynoed at the wheels?
The ONLY reason it failed was a lack of oil
Did you check/drain the t-case? That might be where your transmission oil went. If they don't have an external oil leak it is easy to neglect checking the oil level. You may want to reseal the t-case at this time.
Back when my brother was running a ’97 2500 Cummins, he was rebuilding the automatic roughly every 30,000 miles at a cost of around $3,000. He figured the 10 cents a mile cost was peanuts in the grand scheme of things.