Somewhere around now my enlistment ended, I went home (I thought for good) and somewhere around Virginia’s border my transmission lines rubbed through and my transmission E36 M3 itself. I nursed it through NC, then I used my AAA Premium account and the 3x100 mile daily tows to get to north Georgia. I wasted a day or two in a hotel while my best friend came up with his F250 and a flatbed trailer and he towed me on home.
I went and got the El Camino again so I had a vehicle and hated life for a while.
Life was not good. The El Camino’s trans started to lose reverse, I had a series of very very crappy jobs and I realized I missed the USAF. So I joined the Reserves.
Life started to get better. I got a dog, I got a better job, I got a gf, I continued to advance in rank in the Reserves. Eventually I cross-trained in the USAF into a new job and had to go TDY to Port Hueneme, California for training. I hadn’t advanced in rank enough for them to want to allow me a rental car, so I talked to my folks and they helped me replace the transmission again. We sprung for a brand new FoMoCo unit. I packed my crap, left the dog with the gf and headed out to California for about 4.5 months. Hurricane Ike was hitting Mississippi so I diverted up 231 around Panama City and got onto I-40 to head west.
Life was good until I got to Arkansas. Here was the very first time the truck ever let me down for any reason that wasn’t ultimately my fault. At about 215k miles, the fuel pump shat itself, AAA again rescued me and took me to a shop, they pulled the original fuel pump out of the tank, slapped a new one in, then I got on the road again. Life was good again except now I had to make up the 8 hours I lost from the time I got stranded on the highway to the time I got back on the road.
Got to Cali, went to school to become a vehicle maintenance technician (a mechanic.)
These training trucks had names of just about everyone that had ever crawled under them carved into the paint. Despite the mileage, no one should want them.
I ordered bits from National Parts Depot while I was in school, replaced the springs and added front and rear sway bars.
Did some neat E36 M3, saw some neat stuff, then it was time to go home. Dad flew out to ride back with me. We went ~1500 miles out of the way, went up the eastern side of California, through Lone Pine and other little spots along US 395. Got up to Carson City and headed East along Hwy 50, “The loneliest road in America”
Stopped in most of the “major” towns along the way for food, lodgings, gas, tourist traps, etc. Saw Silver Springs, Fallon, Austin, Eureka, Ely, all sorts of little places. We saw the Fairview Peak Earthquake Fault and got stuck in the snow halfway up. We checked out the BLM managed park area west of Ely where they dynamited the top of a mountain that contained garnets so that tourists could go rock-hounding. Again, snow prevented us from finding anything, but we had fun wandering up the hill and slipping and sliding down the hill.
Convict Lake, Ca
Fault line and a stuck truck
We learned the lesson from the fault line, so we parked at the road and walked up the garnet hill