but that does make it look a lot more the NP203/205 which goes with theme I'm working on by making the truck look older.
Yeah, that's why I mentioned it.
Martin
but that does make it look a lot more the NP203/205 which goes with theme I'm working on by making the truck look older.
thanks for the business!Can't believe I haven't worked on this thing in a month. So I bought some random stuff. Ambull shackles and engineered vintage shackle mounts. The really cool thing is the the front license plate. I went to the C10 Nats in Nashville and all saw was USA-1, heartbeat of America, and blah blah blah. I would bet my next paycheck 75% of the trucks with front plates had one of those two plates. They don't look bad but I wanted some that held true to the era but wasn't overdone. A FB post on the NOS page got me digging and I found this YouTube video with this plate. This was the sales slogan for '74 and '75. I couldn't find one for sale anywhere so I had one made. Showed a seller on Etsy (of all things) a picture and they made it. I think it's cool and definitely different. Reasonably priced too. What do you think? I bet someone remembers this plate.
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You think this is bad, ever been in a Chevy van?On today's edition of what did I learn: I learned that the passenger and factory seats are not mirrored in the same location. If you're not following what I mean, what I mean is the driver seat is further towards the driver's door and the passenger seat is further away from the passenger door by comparison. Best guess on this is so that the steering wheel is centered up for the driver. Why they wouldn't just mirror those measurements on the passenger side I do not know unless it was to make a little bit more room for passengers to go into the rear of the vehicle. Why this matters is one, I thought it was square like probably most of you did, and two, the stupid people that built these reproduction panels took none of that into consideration and so I get to do even more cutting and welding to get the seat bolt location in the rear inner driver to actually function in a way that won't rip through the floor after year driving. Take a look at my measurements.
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Regrettably, they are the same size. I did think about it a lot, but with the contours of the floor and whatnot it was kind of hard to do it that way without getting really serious into the fabrication aspect with all the angles to match those contours. Since it's not a roll cage I don't know that it's ever going to have an amount of pressure on it that would ever tear it unless the vehicle was being torn into pieces anyways in a high speed crash. My thought process was more along the lines of this has to be better than what was there before and should definitely spread the weight better. It made It 30 years with those cheap weld on nuts/plates they use. Let's hope I'm in the grave before it tears again. Either way I have a skill to fix it if this doesn't work.Are the plates the same size on top and bottom? Usually you want the lowers a little bigger so they do not pinch tear the sheet metal over time.
Find the ends of the crack drill to stop the crack and weld it.So I got the cowl side panel off. Initially, I patched the rust hole in it that the rain gutter caused, after I got it off, I have decided to just buy a new one since they make them now and I had to really destroy it to remove it, at least up top. What a waste of time, but it did help me practice my skills a little. If you'll notice, after this things got a little out of hand and now the door is off. The big concern though is the stress crack I found behind the lower hinge on the door jamb. I've never seen one crack here. I'm assuming standard procedure would be to just deepen that groove a little bit and weld it up shut. I am curious why I cracked here though. I'm working on getting the kick panel rust and floor rust by the kick panel cut out so I'll be able to look up in there with the camera tomorrow. I'm open to suggestions about that stress crack.
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