With this Labor Day Weekend’s “theme” around here being working vehicles, we knew we couldn’t pass up another chance to share this insane tire shredding dump truck we have dubbed the Thump Truck. It’s got over 1000 horsepower at the tires and is currently working on getting deep into the 13 second zone. Oh yeah, it weighs 23,000 lbs remember. And it hauls dirt and gravel every day as well. Check it out.<\/p>\n
(Photos by Dave Nutting and Brian Lohnes) – This thing is truly insane. A 23,000lb\u00a0behemoth making 1,000hp at the tire that defies logic, the known laws of physics, and all levels of common sense. On the day photog Dave Nutting and I met Leon Smith, the owner of this 1998 Kenworth T-800 truck, it was way below zero. The wind was howling at the huge gravel pit we were shooting the photos at, the pyrometer on the dash of the truck was hovering near zero and the big diesel motor was not all that happy. Leon had spiked the gas tank with a big dose of anti-gelling agent, which was good because we had already spotted at least one dead truck with a tank full of goo on the side of the road. Dave and I were hoping to get some burnout shots but we didn’t want Leon to wound the motor. I threw a non-chalant, “Can you do a burnout of two without hurting it?” at Leon and his immediate response was, “Oh yeah, we can do burnouts.” GAME ON!<\/p>\n
This is a Kenworth dump truck doing burnouts!<\/p><\/div>\n
This is the most BangShift approved hot rod dump truck on Earth, mainly because Leon has forged a long and lonely trail of performance innovations with a relatively unloved engine family, good old fashion Yankee ingenuity, and he still uses the truck at work every day.<\/p>\n
Cutting to the chase, this truck has run the quarter mile in 14.2 seconds at over 98mph with an Eaton-Fuller 18-speed manual transmission! Most likely that will wipe the floor with whatever you drove to work in and it will eat a lot of street rods alive. With a new slate of upgrades for 2012, Leon hopes to punch the 10-ton truck into the 13 second zone. Rudolph Diesel just threw up Dio horns in his grave. The larger question within these shockingly awesome numbers is pretty glaring, though. How the hell did this happen? How did a guy become obsessed with making a dump truck haul 12 yards of ass at the drag strip?<\/p>\n
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The Long Ride Home –\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n
One of the major reasons that this truck became a speed machine is the fact that it was quite the opposite of speedy when Leon bought it. “I bought this truck in 2008 from a dealer in Colorado,” Smith said. “The truck was not a dump truck at that point, but a tractor that worked in New Mexico pulling double trailers. It had a 10-speed transmission, a 12.7L, 430hp, Detroit Series 60 engine and a governed speed of 58mph. That sucked pretty bad because we drove it home to Connecticut.” Leon had taken an old salt of a truck driver named Jack Boothby with him to help with the driving chores, but ol’ Jack didn’t get too much wheel time. “He kept telling me that he wanted to drive, but I just wanted to keep going. At one point I had to let him drive because I was so tired, but it was only for a few hours so I could have a nap,” Smith said with a laugh. “It took us a few days to get home and at that point we swapped in the 18-speed transmission, added the 12-yard dump body, and painted the truck, which was an awful shade of yellow when we drove it home.”<\/p>\n
How Leon Caught the “big truck, big power” bug –\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n
This whole super sized hot rod bug is something you catch and then can’t ever be cured of. The needle got buried deep into Leon’s arm years ago when a man named Bob Davis was in need of help when his own hot rodded big rig puked a water pump. Leon and his friend Stacy Richardson fixed the truck for Davis and at the tender age of 18, Smith was allowed to take a short squirt in the driver’s seat. Of interest was the fact that at the time in the 1990s Davis had one of the baddest trucks in the country. Smith hauled tail on some small country roads around his Connecticut home and Davis was pretty impressed with the skills he saw. The two have been life long friends ever since and Leon Smith has been on a quest to bend the laws of physics even harder than his hero did! (Here’s a photo of the two dudes and their trucks!)<\/p>\n
The modifications begin<\/strong><\/p>\n
A Band of Diesel Hot Rodding Henchmen Help Out<\/strong><\/p>\n
\u00a0Big Power and Bigger Secrecy in the Big Rig Drag Racing World<\/strong><\/p>\n
Here’s what we can tell you. When we were randomly throwing numbers at him with respect to the size of the turbos, he laughed at us when we mentioned 100mm inlet size. They are significantly larger than 100mm….each. \u00a0The “non-race” combo that is on the truck for the day to day grind of actually being an operational dump truck consists of an S400 and HX-82 feeding the beast.\u00a0<\/a><\/p>\n
What is it Like to Speed in a Two Story Building –<\/strong><\/p>\n
The Big Finish!\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n