135 63 86MB
English Pages 81 Year 1967
· -T he last few weeks Half-Mast has been jawing with a lot of you guys about your maintenanc~: and supply problems. You'd never believe it, but the one thing' th~ t's bugging men and their Qut· fits everywhere is publications: No tech manuals, old and out -of-date manuals, or the wrong manuals for the equipment on
hand. A situation like that is bad _ .. for maintenance and for getting the right repair parts.
The big thing to remember about getting your manuals is this. . You'll never get 'em unless you order 'em .
That's right. Most pubs nowadays are distributed on the pinpoint system, and you (meaning company, battery. troop or
detachment) won't get the pubs on pinpoint unless you keep your pinpoint
forms right up to snuff. Up-snuff 'em by checking 'em over at least' every 3 months. If your equipment, tools, or TOE change, your publications orders (on the DA 12-Series forms) have got to change . The Publications Center won't know you've got a new model multifuel truck or a new kind of weapon unless
you tell them .. , on the 12-Series forms. Keep those publications order forms up to date. And this includes any change in your address. Also, when you need more pubs than your outfit received, or you need new ones to replace worn or lost copies, send
in the order on a DA Form 17 to the Publications Center. For more details,
see DA PAM 310-10. Having the know-how is half the main-
tenance battle. And a good, up-to-date TM gives you that know·how.
COMES FROM
' ~~ . ·The last few weeks Half-Mast has been jawing with a lot of you guys about your maintenanc~: and supply problems. You'd never believe it, but the one thing', th~ t's bugging men and their out · fits everywhere is publications: No tech manuals, old and out -ot·date manuals, or the wrong manuals for the equipment on
hand. A situation like that is bad ... for maintenance and for getting the right repair parts.
The big thing to remember about getting your manuals is this . . You'll never get 'em unless you order 'em.
That's right. Most pubs nowadays are distributed on the pinpoint system, and you (meaning company, battery, troop or
detachment) won't get the pubs on pinpoint unless you keep your pinpoint
forms right up to snuff. Up-snuff 'em by checking 'em over at least' every 3 months. If your equipment, tools, or TOE change, your publications orders (on the DA 12·Series forms) have got to change . The Publications Center won't know you've got a new model multifuel truck or a new kind of weapon unless
you tell them .. , on the 12-Series forms. Keep those publications order forms up to date. And this includes any change in your address. Also, when you need more pubs than your outfit received, or you need new ones to replace worn or lost copies, send
in the order on a DA Form 17 to the Publications Center. For more details,
see DA PAM 310-10. Having the know-how is half the main-
tenance battle. And a good, up-to-date TM gives you that know·how.
/
COMES FROM
Let's face ie-whether it's your feet or your fuel, you just gotta be extra fussy in hoe, humid, tropical operations. Clean feet and dry socks are your best protection against jungle rot, fungus and infection. Water and dirt are your enemies too in your 2Y2-ton or 5-ton multifuel truck's fuel system. Water in your fuel-especially diesel fuel- is a setup for fungus and bacteria growth that'll plug your filter clements solid. And when water sneaks by your filters, it gets into your fuel injection pump and rusts those finelymachined parts. Dirt is like a sandblast when it goes thru your high-pressure fuel injection pump, grinding and chewin' away at the innards of a pretty expensive piece of equipment.
You can head off most dirt by bein' mighty careful during refueling. But nobody's come up with a way yet to keep moist a ir out of your truck's fuel tank or to keep this moist air from condensing in the tank. You can help some by making sure your eank's fuel level is always at or dose to the FUll mark. This'll ho~d the air space to a minimum. Water separates from fuel and settles to the bottom. So do the heavier bits of dirt. \Vhen possible, you should drain this stuff from the bottom of your fuel tank-about once a week should do it or oftener when required by local conditions.
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