Looking at a 3500 chevy dump truck

atlarge54

Member
Sealed bid auction. I think it's an '84 chevy 3500 6.2 diesel, auto with 14,000mi yes that's the correct miles. The dump bed might be about 5 years old and is near mint condition. I talked to one of the employees and he's been driving it the past couple weeks and thinks one of the injectors isn't right (slight miss???) and the auto trans doesn't shift perfectly--vacuum issue? I will be going back for more information soon.

Any advice would be appreciated.

My current truck is a 99 F250 and I don't even put 2,000 mi/yr on it.
 
bid on a 86 gmc 3500 4x4 reg. cab firetruck 6.2L 3 speed w/creeper. It had a "mini pumper" body on it. Went for $4050. It had 21,000 miles. Very well maintained (obviously coming from a fire department) and clean.

I imagine the price was a little higher since the pumper body was all aluminum with either a 250 or 350 gpm pump.

Hope this helps.
Rick
 
That seems like a heck of a deal! Especially if you had a use for a small fire protection vehicle.

I assume with 4WD and that small of a chassis that the truck is what we would call a "brush rig" rather than a pumper. I would expect it to carry about 200-300 gallons of water and probably it has 2 or 3 reels of rubber coated hose and plumbing to connect regular 1.5" fabric covered fire hose. Some brush rigs use the truck engine to operate the fire pump and some have secondary engines that run the pump independantly. Often the units with secondary engines are built to be transferred to new chassis.

A brush rig may have very low mileage, but the mileage it has may have been really tough miles, and might not include a bunch of time running the pump while the truck is stationary. When I was a fireman, we took our brush rigs into all sorts of places, including places people thought we could not get to. We had to use the front winch a number of times to get back out or to safety.

During my fire service, our department put new chassis under our brush rigs, which had been 1959 Dodge Power Wagons. The one I ran the most also got a new rear unit, as the district sold the complete brush rig to another department. The new Ford chassis that they used were not nearly as strong or solid as the old Dodges, and I think they replaced them a few years later with IHC chassis that were rated for about twice the weight.

Back then, the bluegrass farmers were allowed to burn off the straw after they had combined it. This got rid of the almost useless straw, killed the weed seeds, and most important, stimulated the bluegrass plants to produce much more seed than they normally would. Almost all the bluegrass farmers had some kind of old brush rig to use when they burned off the fields. They would plow a wide fire line around the perimeter of the fields and light the field around the edge of the fire line so the fire would burn toward the center of the field. It worked really well, and I do not remember any of the fires ever getting away from the farmers. But it did produce some smoke, and a lot of steam. In the end, the econazis made it illegal for the farmers to burn their fields, which resulted in my area losing the economic advantage it had in producing bluegrass seed. Tough times in the farming community. Lots of farmers have gone back to growing wheat, which requires much more tillage and which results in lots more soil erosion, which bluegrass farming had almost eliminated.

It would be interesting to know if the buyer of the 86 GMC plans to use it as a fire truck, or if they plan to do something else with the chassis. It might have a lot of aluminum in the fire fighting unit. I think an aluminum water tank would be great, since steel tanks rusting out was one of the big reason my district needed to update the brush rigs.

Thanks for the post.
 
Neighbor ended up winning the bid. Says he is going to use it for parades.

Not a firefighter, but I always thought a brush rig was a truck with a tank and a pump, kind or a stand alone vehicle. This truck has the full rear utility box with multiple compartments, ladders, hookup to tie into a hydrant etc. Exactly like you would see built on a C6500 or F700 chassis only smaller.

Looking to see if I still have a pic of it.

Rick
 
Hal,
This is what the truck looked like, just red.
All our local brush rigs keep the stock rear box and typically just add a tank/hose setup.

Kind of wish I would have bid a little more and got it.
Rick
81minipumper.jpg
 
I'm also a "glass half empty type" plus I'm a diesel virgin.

Turns out the truck is an '88 not an '84.

I'm guessing these "1 ton" dumps can only haul a dab of sand or gravel and are more suited for firewood, mulch etc.
 
I would give you anything for a 6.2 diesel. If the truck is want you want then get it cheap enough to swap a 350 gas in there.
 

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