Poly mounts and all bolts are in.I assume the body mounts are all good and the bed is securely attached to the frame?
Poly mounts and all bolts are in.I assume the body mounts are all good and the bed is securely attached to the frame?
Nope it happened the year before. Moab hates my truck but it works so well… I run in these word spots like this. It’s hard to really understand this truck unless you see it 4 years in a rowIt’s odd that the bulkhead bolts hit the cab, how can the bed get closer to the cab? I can see sideways twist causing the bed and cab to come out of alignment but to get them to touch? Unless that happened when you landed on the frame in Moab?
Frame is good, just twists a lot cause it’s a noodle. This truck was converted from a 2wd to a 4wd and gets beat on.Have you had a good look over the frame - to make sure its in good order?
Do I remember you doing something to convert from 2wd to 4wd? or am I thinking of someone else?
Yes, I’m o the same page as you. I’m currently working with a fabricator to build me a trans crossmember.My understanding is that partially reinforcing and extra flexy frame is gonna cause more stress at the end of the reinforcement. Not really a good thing.
Uncle had a 68 that'd been rode hard more than a few times. Front end was kinda wobbly, wouldn't drive straight and couldn't get a good alignment. Turns out the rivets in the frame were loose. Drilled them out and went to some quality grade -8's. it helped. Not sure how long it lasted as he sold the truck a few years later but it did improve.
Which is why I was asking if you'd had a good hard look at the frame or not.
In your situation I'd prob consider building a singular large mount. Hold trans/tcase all on the same cradle. That won't allow them to work against ea other.



It’s going to be a few days but I’m excited. It’s just a basic 2 car garage.Pictures of garage or it's not real.![]()