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A Hillbilly Crawls Under His 5 Ton And . . .

arkansawn

New member
4
0
1
Location
Bentonville, Arkansas
Gentlepeople of the Forum,

My M923A2 recently threw a torque rod after skidding several oak logs. It was great fun trying to figure out what was happening at the time.

Here is what popped out: the driver's side, frontmost part of the backmost lower torque rod. The truck is now stranded in an odd position in one of my fields (on a hill and leaning a bit).

Never removed one of these things before and getting it back to the shop while not impossible isn't going to be easy. My question is: is there enough clearance to remove both castle nuts so that I can remove and fix it without removing tires or other components of the truck?

Thanks!

Arkansawn
 

simp5782

Feo, Fuerte y Formal
Supporting Vendor
12,095
9,259
113
Location
Mason, TN
Gentlepeople of the Forum,

My M923A2 recently threw a torque rod after skidding several oak logs. It was great fun trying to figure out what was happening at the time.

Here is what popped out: the driver's side, frontmost part of the backmost lower torque rod. The truck is now stranded in an odd position in one of my fields (on a hill and leaning a bit).

Never removed one of these things before and getting it back to the shop while not impossible isn't going to be easy. My question is: is there enough clearance to remove both castle nuts so that I can remove and fix it without removing tires or other components of the truck?

Thanks!

Arkansawn
Yes. There are several toque rod replacement threads. You can chain a tire to the front steer axle then turn the steering wheel to pull it back in line. Or a chain fall from the axle to something stationary behind the truck to adjust it back into spot.

You can do all the torque rod nuts with the tires on.

Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
 

tobyS

Well-known member
4,820
815
113
Location
IN
Can you work it into position and get it back on with jacks and blocking? Then use a ratchet strap to keep it on, back to the shop.
 

arkansawn

New member
4
0
1
Location
Bentonville, Arkansas
Can you work it into position and get it back on with jacks and blocking? Then use a ratchet strap to keep it on, back to the shop.
Possibly but the fact that it's listing and on a hill makes this a bit sketchy. I can probably pull the middle axle forward with a chain hoist. I was mostly wondering whether or not I could simply remove the torque rod by getting access to those nuts and then running into town to have a new end pressed in it.

Arkansawn
 

74M35A2

Well-known member
4,145
312
83
Location
Livonia, MI
Those two are easy access. 2-1/4” end wrench for the rear, and same or socket for the front. Use wood splitting wedge to apply seperation force, smack the bracket with a hammer it will come off. You may need a second end wrench to extend the first for increased leverage. Don’t bother trying to pull cotter keys, just rotate the nut and shear them off.

I have used the large ratchet straps to pull and hold axle back into place to drive home, then repair, twice.
 
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