Kanakaman
New member
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- Location
- Truckee, CA
My neighbors and I purchased from auction a M923 A2 several years ago and we transformed it into a community fire truck with a poly 1600 gallon watertank on board. The truck sits a lot. I maybe put 10 miles a year on it. It snows where I live, so in the winter I don't drive it at all, and in the spring when I start it up and put it in gear, I have to mash the accellerator almost to the floor to get it to move. Until recently, once it was warmed up it seemed to run fine, but lately it seems like the trans may be slipping. I drive it down my road at 20 mph and when I step on the accellerator pretty much nothing happens- the rpms don't increase (much) and it moves forward but not like you'd expect when you step on the throttle- rpms stay the same, and the truck slowly speeds up... it just feels like (perhaps) the Allison trans is slipping. The truck supposedly only has 6000 miles on it and is in great condition. Engine bay looks very clean, all the fluids are clean..... do any of you guys have any ideas?

The Army has dipsticks on nearly everything and it's on the passenger side near the starter (both engine and transmission). Altitude won't be hindering it that much and the TM -10 should cover any power loss per gain in altitude. Luckily the 8.3 has a turbo, unlike it's predecessor the cummins 250, so it's not likely to be starving for air unless the filter/intake is restricted. The fact that you're not getting any throttle response confirms it's more likely fuel or linkage related. It may be wise to pull the intake boot off the front of the turbo to visually inspect the turbo and make sure it spins freely. In the off chance the turbo is seized (not saying it is) then it's not breathing and will be incredibly anemic to the point it wont move out of its own way. Let us know what you find. 