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1975 Tucker 1544 - project and trips

Seems the steering ram was set for around 1,000 psi to avoid destroying the Tucker steering apparatus.
So again need specs on the Dodge pumps. Especially the volume.
 
The steering ram has 4.91 push and 4.22 sq.in. pull, so a push of 1” would be 4.91 cubic inches. Now how long would it take the Dodge pump to pump 1” into the ram?

No numbers on my Vickers pump, but the V20 series starts at 6 usgpm and goes up to 13 usgpm which is 1386 to 3003 cubic inches per minute.
 
IDK about the dodge pump. Vickers pumps the vanes didn't seal until a certain RPM. This let the engine start without the additional load of the hydraulic system. I know some pumps have a spring that keeps the vanes against the casing always. Vickers didn't and relied on centrifugal force to push them against the casing. Almost certainly not an issue, but a little bit of trivia.
 
Having a little fun now.
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I see this Tucker for sale just came up on Facebook at Fort St James, BC
With the exchange rate this is pretty cheap, no?
I am busy enough with one Tucker.


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Could you snap pics of where your oil sending unit and oil switch is located on that motor? I think I saw someone test some old oil from the paper cans and it was better than today's oils.....and they had to use the device on the back of that funnel!
 
It's a little deceptive that you would have us try to identify a piece that was BROKEN OFF from the larger tool. :whistling:

......... (it's a tumor....... I know it is).
 
Those are crimp rivets. He has a opener enabled funnel. Stab the can lightly. Rotate can stab it fully.
Flip funnel over and pour.
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Mine had a lever and a trigger. You load the can and place the funnel over the oil spout and pull the trigger and the can pushes down into the "key" and it dumps oil into the engine. My Dad gave it to me. I only got to use it two or three times before it became obsolete, back in the mid-80's.

Similar to THIS one..... but mine was better.


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Hey..... I just realized ............. that isn't broken, is it? That is a oil can key that is riveted into that funnel? I've never seen one like that.

...(homemade?)

Thanks redsqwrl for the closeup......... I thought that "key" was just sitting there, loose... inside the funnel.
 
Hey..... I just realized ............. that isn't broken, is it? That is a oil can key that is riveted into that funnel? I've never seen one like that.

...(homemade?)

Thanks redsqwrl for the closeup......... I thought that "key" was just sitting there, loose... inside the funnel.
I thought it was a bratwurst/sausage at first glance.

I buy all the oil cans i can find at estate sales and rummage sales. Sellers around here are happy to see them go.
 
I found this funnel in an abandoned pump station on the Canol pipeline that ran from Norman Wells NWT to Whitehorse Yukon that was paid for by the USA. The pipeline was only 4" with a pump station every 40 to 60 miles and was started in 1942 and working by 1944, and then quickly mothballed as being too expensive compared to shipping fuel by sea as the Japanese threat was much diminished by then. Lots of cool old relics, but in 2017 the federal government sent in crews to completely smash and pile up everything they could. It was called a clean up.
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Could you snap pics of where your oil sending unit and oil switch is located on that motor? I think I saw someone test some old oil from the paper cans and it was better than today's oils.....and they had to use the device on the back of that funnel!

The oil sending fitting is back by the distributor. This unit uses a wet line to the gauge. The brass fitting.


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