Bad thing is once its all patched its still junk underneath.
"underneath" ?Bad thing is once its all patched its still junk underneath.
Yes, all the safety cap pieces get welded over the existing frame, the base frame is so heavily rusted that the metal is already compromised. It’s essentially welding good clean metal over rusty metal. The frame is only as solid as the parent material that makes it up."underneath" ?
So what do you recommend?Yes, all the safety cap pieces get welded over the existing frame, the base frame is so heavily rusted that the metal is already compromised. It’s essentially welding good clean metal over rusty metal. The frame is only as solid as the parent material that makes it up.
Probably the same I did, walk away.So what do you recommend?
This for me ^walk away
I understand that, I lived on the Mediterranean and everything rusted, we didn't have many options so we had to keep chasing rust, but as you know rust never sleeps.Let's say this is your only truck. You take $200 from the scrap yard and go spend $12k-$25k on another used truck to avoid the work? You can recover another grand or two if you spend a week parting it out.
The idea is to bring the frame along for a more normal lifetime of the vehicle, which is basically until the body rusts out. He can't just jump on Marketplace and find another cheap truck that doesn't have the same problem. The kit exists, so people are buying it. I know a guy doing it right now.
The OP said he just bought this truck, meaning he bought it already this rusty. He lives in PA, I live in PA. You'd be better off going south and buying a rust free truck. If you've had the truck since new and your only option is to fix it (financially or by choice) then I get that. I still don't think its the best way to go because the strength of the frame is compromised at that point but if you can get it to pass inspection and your comfortable with it so be it. Bringing the frame along for a more normal lifetime would mean coating it with wool wax or oil from new so it doesn't rot like this. I don't believe the blame falls on the manufacturers as much as it does the states that use this crap on the roads...its destroying bridges just as fast as frames.Let's say this is your only truck. You take $200 from the scrap yard and go spend $12k-$25k on another used truck to avoid the work? You can recover another grand or two if you spend a week parting it out.
The idea is to bring the frame along for a more normal lifetime of the vehicle, which is basically until the body rusts out. He can't just jump on Marketplace and find another cheap truck that doesn't have the same problem. The kit exists, so people are buying it. I know a guy doing it right now.
Yea, the frame internals are impossible to fix. Whatever I can reach with my needle scaler will get cleaned up and repaired. I'm going to vacuum out all of the bad flaky metal and waxy coating from inside the frame just so it doesn't continue to trap water. I also plan on spray painting the interior of the frame and then using fluid film to prevent further deterioration.Yes, all the safety cap pieces get welded over the existing frame, the base frame is so heavily rusted that the metal is already compromised. It’s essentially welding good clean metal over rusty metal. The frame is only as solid as the parent material that makes it up.
What ever was on was bolted with a washer, so yeah not just a missing rivetJust to make you feel bad. This is our highly abused truck at the plant. It took a good 2 hrs of pressure washing to get it this clean. Apparently the missing rivet on the spring hanger is normal because both are that way. It does have an aftermarket market rear bumper. Maybe there was a bracket there.
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It's got a bolt there now.What ever was on was bolted with a washer, so yeah not just a missing rivet