I regret selling most every vehicle I’ve owned.
We’ll see how it goes. I’m making a cart at summit with essentials and same for lmc to see what I need just to get rolling. If it’s less than what I think, (around $2,000) I may just keep the K5
I regret selling most every vehicle I’ve owned.
Not selling the blazer. Yes, Im wishy washy. I can’t do it. The $$ would be great. But the regret has to high a dollar amount.
The mechanical gauge is one of my favorite things about the older trucks.Stock gauges would have a line to the mechanical gauge. The trucks without gauges used senders for the lights.
The line goes into the block next to the distributor.
I have the drive shaft but I have no idea if it was ever used with this TH400... the drive shaft is beat to shiz, so a complete rebuild or new driveshaft will be needed no matter the transmission I decide on.I honestly can't remember if the '69 trucks had the kickdown switch on the pedal, or at the back of the carburetor. I can't go look at my Dad's truck easily, it's covered in his crowded shop.
I don't see any reason why you can't put it at the pedal, especially since you are doing the wiring.
If you use the transmission that you have, you should have the driveshaft and yoke, correct? You would have to get a longer driveshaft, and a different yoke for a TH350.
Are you asking about the collector bolts on the manifolds? On side could have had a heat riser flapper, in a block that bolted in line with the pipe.
Right but if I swap to frame rail tank and inlet/outlet/vent would be needed on the mechanical fuel pump, correct?That damper might be all the way on. I thought you had already used the new tool. The center bolt should pull it the rest of the way, just set your torque wrench to finial 60 ft pds.
No return on a sixty 69