muddermilitia said:Yea that's it! Man that thing is bada$$. K10A'sBROinSLO, instead of narrowing a pickup cab, you should narrow an entire blazer body, then also narrow the blazer cap. You could have a two seater with the passanger sitting behind you. Or, how about a suburban body![]()
K10A'sBROinSLO said:The gears are turning again...I've always been pretty stuck on leafs, but the other day I picked up this 60-something 2wd rolling chassis somebody dumped in front of the JY, mostly cuz it has a 1 ton Eaton rear end I thought might be interesting and partly cuz I wanted to look at the coil suspension. It's basically 2 beams that go from an Xmember under the back of the cab and bolt to the bottom of the axle like leaf springs. It has coils on top of them and a bar going across the rear of the axle from the frame to the axle to locate it laterally. We looked at it a bit, and decided it wasn't very useful, since it doesn't flex because the beams cannot twist. Then tonight I was thumbing thru the Dec 06 4 wheel and offroad and came across this green '65 FJ45 that's using those beams. He put them on top of the axle and uses 2 upper links to locate it laterally. I wonder how well it works. I was thinking about grafting the whole rear of this truck onto the back of the K5, maybe making the beams longer end putting heims on them at the frame end so they'd twist and putting a pickup cab and stepside bed on it. Have I ever mentioned that I love stepsides?
.bear76 said:![]()
![]()
I was sitting on the toilet this very morning reading about that same green FJ in the same mag. and had the same idea
![]()
![]()
![]()

RaisedK5 said:You'd be suprised how much twist you can get out of those arms. They look rigid, but they are actually pretty twisty. I remember mags a buch of years back running a bunch of trucks that used the chevy beams with tall coils. Tehy seemed to flex pretty well. I had a pair at one point was going to do something silly to the truck, but reality got the better of me (poor college student at the time) so i decided to stay with leaves, but i was suprised at the weight of the beams and the apparent flexines of them. I wouldn't say they are as good as a well designed 4 link, but for junkyar pieces with a panhard, i think they might work pretty well. ( the above is purely drunken opinion and reflects no real first hand knowledge, so take it for what its worth)
K10A'sBROinSLO said:MIT said it's not really an Eaton..but I guess it wouldn't matter if that's what everyone calls them.
. They are pretty strong and I belive you can put a Detroit from a 14FF and run the 30 spline 14FF shafts in it. I think Eatons only had 16 spline shafts. Georgiagabe has one in his rig.
http://www.coloradok5.com/forums/showthread.php?t=196846&highlight=eatonK10A'sBROinSLO said:How about this....'70 pickup cab, '55 stepside bed on stretched '88 blazer frame.![]()
Full exo, removable doors, bedsides, fenders like pic.
Friend of mine has some classic sheetmetal sitting around...