Your thoughts on this Freightliner?

wrenchtech

Senior Member
Joined
May 14, 2019
Posts
415
Location
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin
It's from the upper Midwest it's a shorter what model with five passenger windows on each side. It's powered by a 5.9 Cummins it has an automatic transmission, I'm assuming it is an Allison 2000. There is no separate air-conditioning for the passenger compartment. And it has 250,000 miles on it, which is the most miles I've seen on any bus I've looked at so far. I haven't seen it in person yet. The owner says there's a little bit of rust. What might a bus like this be worth?

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What year? No air conditioning in the back is good, one less thing to remove and dispose of. "Little bit of rust" + upper midwest = "a lot of rust".
 
It's from Illinois. I'm wondering if the reason it has so many miles on it is because the state is broke, and so they probably run their equipment longer than some others.
 
+250,000 miles. Could mean lots of exposure to the elements.

The mileage alone is not an indication of much. My Genesis had 255K on it and it's in really good condition. I'm not sure of that mileage on a 5.9, especially if it's backed by a 545.
 
The mileage alone is not an indication of much. My Genesis had 255K on it and it's in really good condition. I'm not sure of that mileage on a 5.9, especially if it's backed by a 545.

The term "545" is new on me. Does that make some reference to the body configuration?
 
That's the ideal year for a skoolie, at least (buses after that started having emissions stuff installed which is pricey to maintain).

If the Cummins motors in these buses are like the Cummins motors in the Dodge pick up trucks, I'm not aware of any emissions equipment that anyone would need to be afraid of. I heard that international did something like that though.
 
The term "545" is new on me. Does that make some reference to the body configuration?

It's the Allison transmission that was put behind 95% of the buses that came with a Cummins 5.9



"+250,000 miles. Could mean lots of exposure to the elements."

If that's a pic of the actual bus, the elements haven't done any damage.
 
Passenger compartment AC is not good! I thought it would be handy for traveling down the road in the summer.

I would put up some kind of temporary curtain behind the driver's seat and just rely on the cabin AC. Cooling the volume of the back (if the AC was even still working - a lot of the auction buses seem to have this broken FWIW) would lower your mileage even more, and you shouldn't have passengers back there unless you have properly-mounted forward-facing seats with shoulder belts, which almost nobody does.

Moot point on this bus since it doesn't have the AC anyway. :dance:
 
It's the Allison transmission that was put behind 95% of the buses that came with a Cummins 5.9



"+250,000 miles. Could mean lots of exposure to the elements."

If that's a pic of the actual bus, the elements haven't done any damage.

I dunno, my bus is rusty as **** and the pics in the listing all looked pretty much like this one.
 
If the Cummins motors in these buses are like the Cummins motors in the Dodge pick up trucks, I'm not aware of any emissions equipment that anyone would need to be afraid of. I heard that international did something like that though.

They are similar motors. The Federal regulations went into effect in 04. I don't believe the 5.9 saw any of that. The 5.9/545 was the base drivetrain for a route bus. Least desirable by many here.
Most of us would replace the factory huge space taking units out and put in more space saving systems. One reason being it will be used more often probably while parked and not running the engine, than running. It's a compromise.
 
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I would put up some kind of temporary curtain behind the driver's seat and just rely on the cabin AC. Cooling the volume of the back (if the AC was even still working - a lot of the auction buses seem to have this broken FWIW) would lower your mileage even more, and you shouldn't have passengers back there unless you have properly-mounted forward-facing seats with shoulder belts, which almost nobody does.

Moot point on this bus since it doesn't have the AC anyway. :dance:

I am a lightweight when it comes to riding around in vehicles with poor air-conditioning. Been there, done that, not doing it anymore.
 
They are similar motors. The Federal regulations went into effect in 04. I don't believe the 5.9 saw any of that. The 5.9/545 was the base drivetrain for a route bus. Least desirable by many here.

I drove an expediting truck in the just-in-time automotive production goods hauling business. It was a Ford 8000 straight truck with a 24 foot box and a Kubota APU hanging off of one of the frame rails. My loads were normally not that heavy, but occasionally they were. My gross vehicle weight probably approached 30,000 pounds on occasion. It was powered by a 5.9 Cummins back by a fuller five-speed. It wasn't fast but it went down the road pretty well.
 

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