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Insane work and attention to detail!

Did you plan on any kind of swaybar front and back? Or will you run it without?

What color will you paint the blazer when all done? some original GM colors?
 
Insane work and attention to detail!

Did you plan on any kind of swaybar front and back? Or will you run it without?

What color will you paint the blazer when all done? some original GM colors?

The ORIs are designed to eliminate the need for "extras".... (Air bumps or sway bars). We'll see if it really works out that way. Neither would be hard to add later on if needed.

Color-wise, probably going with a GM period color like Hugger Orange. Can't really find any other colors that seem like a good fit for this project. :dunno:


-G
 
The ORIs are designed to eliminate the need for "extras".... (Air bumps or sway bars). We'll see if it really works out that way. Neither would be hard to add later on if needed.

Color-wise, probably going with a GM period color like Hugger Orange. Can't really find any other colors that seem like a good fit for this project. :dunno:


-G

I don`t know what GM calls it but there is a Gold color that might be sweet for your rig! :whistle:

Or forest green... like money! :bow:

But I do love the Hugger Orange! :thumb:

Always in to your build, just lost most of the time, so cool!! :waytogo:
 
Great suggestions.....

I've actually considered going back to the original Ochre (aka "Baby Poop Yellow") that my truck was built with.... It's just such a ho-hum color that it's going to be tough to spray it on a truck the I've lavished so much time on.

The medium olive is one that I've thought seriously about. Kurt (VTBlazer) had a beautifully restored 1st Gen in that color. I had a chance to see it in person and go for a ride and the overall look was amazing. I think that color tends to look even better with the black & aluminum body side mouldings. Not sure if it would look as good without the trim pieces.... :dunno: I wasn't planning to put those back on.

And Zim, I actually was looking at some Corvette blues too.... Marina blue, Nassau blue, etc. Still in the GM color palette and roughly the correct time period (late 60s). I'm still conflicted about painting the truck in blue though..... It would look AMAZING against the orange rocks and scenery in Moab. I can almost see the CK5 calendar shot now!! :D

Plenty of time to figure it out... For today, I'll focus more on suspension cycling and fender clearance! :haha:
 
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One of my favorite gm colors is Hawaiian blue it was the factory color on my 73. Love that color
 
I think a lot of colors from late 60's and early 70's would look great Greg
95% of people would never know its not an original color for your truck
I had a lot of people question me on the color of my Vette
Originally a riverside red car which looked dull and dirty
I wanted a brighter red that would pop more than the original red
I ended up with TorchRed a 90's Corvette color and I have NEVER regretted it
And it gets a fokton of compliments!
In the end please your own eyes!
 
I agree with Dave. Choose a color you will love. Who cares if its correct for the year. If anyone says anything hing about oh thats not a factory color they don't get it
 
Yep I third that choose whatever color. I started looking at all the newer cars on the road and when I found a few I liked I went to the paint people and they gave me a PPG book and I picked as close to what I liked as I could.

Once I found a car with the right color, I looked on the net and pulled up the color and then compared it to the paint chips.

I like those shape things like Zim had when he chose his color for the bike.
 
Weren't you planning on running hubcaps? Cause just imagine this truck, but bad assed out.

!!hC08fQCGE~$(KGrHqN,!lkE1F5!ZQ36BNSGCowuzg~~_4.JPG
 
If you want to see it in a magazine, brighter colors and colors that stand apart from the landscape.
 
If you want to see it in a magazine, brighter colors and colors that stand apart from the landscape.

Kert, while that may be the norm i'll bet no matter what color he paints his rig it will see multiple mags just because of the quality and detail of this build. :thumb:
 
I like the hugger orange idea, but the rest of the early 70's muted colors are too bland to me. The baby poop yellow and olive green especially. Sure it's "period correct" but there is a reason nobody has orange shag carpet and olive green refrigerators anymore. lol
 
I like that medium olive. It was the first color that caught my eye.
 
If you can look at Craig Artzner's Blazer and say it isn't beautiful, I would be confused.

Martin
 
2014.08.24 - UPDATE! - MAX BUMP, MAX DROOP & MAX STEERING....!!!


The list is small and getting smaller!!! :waytogo:

I spent about 30 minutes this weekend playing around with the fender openings before I got to the real "business" of moving the project forward. It was important to settle my mind about the overall shape and proportions of the fender opening and although I had achieved the clearance I needed, the aesthetics weren't quite right and it was making me uneasy.

As a quick comparison, here is the fender with the large original cutout with plenty of clearance for the tire in all positions.

IMG_0266.jpg


The process involved adding 3M Green Tape along the edges and slowly bringing those shapes down. I did this with the tire at "full-stuff" to insure that I was seeing any interferences as they happened.....and I swung the tire full-left & full-right (against the steering stops) to confirm everything fit properly. As you can see, because of the way the tire "tucked" under the fender at the very top it was actually possible to run a straight section of tape across there and still not have the tire hit it.

IMG_0267.jpg



So that quick set of tests and tape boundaries established the minimum opening size for the fenderwell. Of course, it wasn't a pretty shape so the next step was to reshape the fender in the style of what a 1st Gen fender actually looks like. For those of you who don't know, the stock fender is only a perfect circle shape at the very top. As the fender sweeps back to the firewall it becomes much more of a straight line until it terminates at the lower fender bolt area. At the leading edge, the curve has a different radius and actually starts to "undercut" and swing back outward at the fang area... this is one of the classic and subtle styling cues that is often lost when fenders get modified for larger tires. That small "point" of the fang is always the first thing the tire hits.... so most people just chop it off. IMHO, that is a mistake.

After spending some time trimming and shaping the taped areas, I had a pretty good representation of the factory shapes for both the front and rear curves.... and the fang sheetmetal was still INTACT!! :waytogo:

IMG_0276.jpg


I think this is just about as good as it's going to get.... short of doing something drastic like installing shorter struts or limit straps. Everything DOES clear now with the new shape....

HARD RIGHT (against the steering stops)

IMG_0279.jpg


HARD LEFT (against the steering stops)

IMG_0285.jpg



.....the only caveat is that to get to HARD RIGHT (against the steering stops) I had to disconnect the draglink. There were still some interferences between the idler swingarm and the bracket it's mounted to. So the next order of business was to unmount it from the frame and give it a bit more clearance. I decided it was probably time to do the finish-welding too.... since the PHB brackets were only tack-welded and probably wouldn't survive once the full weight of the truck was pushing against them. :yikes:

I used my same "spreader trick" that was used on the engine cradle saddles for this part as well. Since I knew that I'd do the interior welding first I didn't want the brackets to shrink and pull-in and prevent me from bolting the idler and PHB heim back into place. I set my clearances with the allthread and dropped some beads down!

IMG_0300.jpg


Then I welded up those splits that I'd cut when I was first forming this part to follow the framerail profile.

IMG_0307.jpg


With a little flapwheel and Roloc disc time... the area was blended-down and ended up looking like a formed part.

Once everything was re-installed, the steering would FINALLY go all the way to the steering stops on hard right turns. :woot: The only thing left to do was to focus on the axle-side PHB mount and make sure that it had adequate clearances in all suspension positions......


It didn't. :doah:


Unfortunately, at full-stuff the draglink would collide with the heim body of the PHB. I was hoping that there would be some kind of simple way to maybe add a thicker shim behind the heim to bring it forward, but the geometry didn't improve and I could never get the draglink to pass underneath the heim the way I needed it to.

So I unbolted the heim to expose the mounting hole, marked it with Dykem and a scribe and broke out my new carbide bit set to raise the hole by 3/8" to see if that would resolve the issue.

IMG_0323.jpg


For the time being I simply tack-welded a 3/4" washer to the backside of this ovaled-out hole (at the new higher position) so that the bolt wouldn't drop out of position during testing. It worked great and was a LOT faster than cutting out that entire mounting plate, and building a completely NEW one with a relocated hole in it.... assuming everything worked out all I'd have to do is weld up the lower part of that hole and put a thicker washer (fully welded) and call it good.

As it turned out, the experiment was a complete success. The new PHB mounting location gave just enough clearance for the draglink to pass underneath and allowed the knuckles to hit their steering stops perfectly.

Now the outer PHB plate can be recut (in a larger size) and the entire heim can be plated-in from above to give it additional strength.

IMG_0327.jpg


The only downside to raising the PHB by 3/8" is that the clearance I used to have between the actual panhard bar and the oilpan has vanished....there is NO daylight between them anymore. But the simple fix will probably be to add a 1/8" spacer to each of the motormounts, and I should be right back to where I was before.

Overall, a pretty good day (and evening) in the shop. Hopefully, I'll be able to get out there in the evenings this week to finish-up the PHB bracing, and then it will be time to do a massive series of bump/droop/turning tests in ALL positions, both on the driver's and passenger sides.....

Assuming that there are no additional surprises, I'm going to call the front suspension DONE and it will be time to charge the struts with nitrogen and pull those caster wheels off the front end for good. :woot:


-G
 
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Nicely done Greg! How are you planning on re-incorporating the fender "lip" along the edge? I imagine that'll be quite a lot of fabricating and hammer/dolly work.

Can't wait to see this thing on the wheels!!!
 

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