Ah, Ok the issue here isn't the GP relay at all most likely. The glow
plug system and the starter are mostly independent. One will function if
the other is faulty, and neither can bring the other one down.
Your problem is, in order of likleyhood:
1. Bad ground at the Battery, chassis connect
Check the starter solenoid wire on the firewall, it's a purple wire
going to a jumper block below the battery if I remember correctly.
It's common for the connection to corrode, giving you intermittent
starter operation.
Loose engine ground and ignition switch are the two common things
be
When I left Texas I had an 87 Blazer that was getting almost rusted
out. I had an old guy build an engine for me and put it in the truck a
few years before. I pulled the engine and tranny and gave the hulk to a
guy. Not sure what I would ever do with it but the engine was somewhat
pricey and
Possibly useful random data:
My W115 300D does an odd thing whereby, after preglow, turning the ignition
switch to the start position occasionally has no effect at all on the starter.
No click, nothing.
I think it is the ground path to the ignition switch, because a) it is more
frequent when
And you could have given Dimitri a chance to come down and weld away all
the rusty spots.
On Sun, Dec 7, 2014 at 11:40 AM, Rich Thomas via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
> When I left Texas I had an 87 Blazer that was getting almost rusted out.
> I had an old guy build an engine for me
I have internet from the cable company, but no cable tv. Since the
cable company can run tv and internet over the same cable in the
house, is there a way I can take a coax from the antenna, and put
that in the coax with the internet?
I assume this would be in the cable junction box attached
Why not use the cat 5 (or wireless) for your internet, and use the cable
for the OTA TV signal? Coax cable with internet gets converted at a modem,
no? Locate the modem as close to the entry point to the house as possible,
break the coax at that point, run new coax from outside antenna to break
p
The coax enters at one end of the house, and the cable modem is at
the other end.
However, it is possible to run a new coax cable from the cable
junction box to the modem.
I'd have to run another cat 5 across the house too, and get another
ethernet switch. And then I'd have to get a signal amp
I don't think that would work -- you would probably bugger up whatever
the cableco is running over the coax, so you will need to separate the
cableco stuff from the antenna stuff.
--R
On 12/7/14 2:19 PM, Meade Dillon via Mercedes wrote:
Why not use the cat 5 (or wireless) for your internet, an
Wilton,
I think that not only has the statute of limitations expired on the windshield,
the truck itself has expired (a lg time ago) ;->)
Regards,
Addison
From: "WILTON"
Subject: [MBZ] Fw: OT - Another non-political B-52 tale - MOVING IN THE BUFF
Date: December 6, 2014 2:50:31 PM PS
I don't think that would work -- you would probably bugger up
whatever the cableco is running over the coax, so you will need to
separate the cableco stuff from the antenna stuff.
--R
Ok thanks. I thought maybe there was a filter that could be used at
the demark to keep the antenna off the
Great story, Wilton! I think, given my druthers, I'd rather see BUFFs
hauling furniture than fissionables, but it IS an imperfect world, alas.
Once again, thanks to you and all servicemen past and present! (raises a
glass)
-MMM-
___
http://www.okiebenz.com
T
I've got sort of a similar situation with my new addition. I ran coax to
the bedroom and kitchen to hook up a new antenna I will put up, and ran
it sorta where the drop from the antenna will be. I was going to put in
a 2 or 3-way distribution with an amp to feed the new stuff of the
antenna an
Larry I will refrain from another of my M1 ATF saved my life Testimonials
but since i have the same car here is my experience. It had 129k on it
when i bought it 9 years ago. Shifted a lttle rough with delays. Put M1 ATF
in it & then changed it 90k miles later to another fill of M1. Now has 243k
&
Gentlemen, thank you for your responses! You are educating an old
farmer, which has to be a good thing.
No, the fuse does not blow when the mystery part is not
installed. It is in series with the the 110 volt hot line to the
transformer.
I tried connecting the line from
Rich,
I saw the cheapest 75 to 300 ohm antenna converters on fleabay are
$4. Lowes has them for $4 with no wait. Coax, however is a
different story. $15 for 50' at lowes, and under 8 bucks on fleabay.
Amp $20 at lowes. $17 for the lease expensive 4 output (Same) on
fleabay. not much sa
What kind of fence (how high) do you electrify that keeps the deer out of
the corn? Around here they laugh as they jump over the fences. Do you
electrify the entire fence or just the top?
On Sun, Dec 7, 2014 at 5:41 PM, David & Kristin Gilmore via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:
>
>
Cable company here (Cox) and AT&T U-verse around here puts a filter on
the the line that runs into the house if you
don't subscribe to TV service. This is supposed to block the TV signal.
I have two friends that have Cox internet and
no tv service. One gets Basic TV thru his the other gets most
I am right between Chicago and South Bend. I need two antennas to receive
broadcasts from both cities. Can I use a coax splitter as a combiner? I have
looked for a combiner and I can't seem to find one.
Rick
Sent from my BlackBerry Z10
___
http://www.okieb
> Curly wrote:
>
>
> I have internet from the cable company, but no cable tv. Since
> the cable company can run tv and internet over the same cable in
> the house, is there a way I can take a coax from the antenna, and
> put that in the coax with the internet?
Technically - yes. Practically -
> Rick wrote:
>
> I am right between Chicago and South Bend. I need two antennas to
> receive broadcasts from both cities. Can I use a coax splitter as
> a combiner? I have looked for a combiner and I can't seem to find
> one.
No.
If there are no channel overlaps, it seems might work. From a
Thanks Fred-
I'll find some! I also want to be sure I'm not overlooking the obvious
- i.e., any device that operates a kick-down function will do so for
_any _up-shift and not just a 1-2 shift, right?
Thx again,
LarryT
91 300D
On 12/6/2014 10:58 AM, Fred Moir via Mercedes wrote:
Rich.Me t
I have a similar situation. to get the stations available, I need 2
antennas aimed in different directions. I suspect if we just hook
the two antenna together with 300 ohm flat cable, it will work.
I am right between Chicago and South Bend. I need two antennas to
receive broadcasts from both
There are such things, look on Amazon.
--R (sent from my miniPad)
On Dec 7, 2014, at 10:59 PM, Curly McLain via Mercedes
wrote:
I have a similar situation. to get the stations available, I need 2 antennas
aimed in different directions. I suspect if we just hook the two antenna
together wi
> Curly wrote:
>
> I saw the cheapest 75 to 300 ohm antenna converters on fleabay
> are $4. Lowes has them for $4 with no wait. Coax, however is a
> different story. $15 for 50' at lowes, and under 8 bucks on
> fleabay.
>
> Amp $20 at lowes. $17 for the lease expensive 4 output (Same) on
>
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