me neither1I have never seen that before. My 14 bolt is through the backing plate, dad’s 9” on the bronco is the backing plate, my last dodge was through the backing plate. Learned something new today.
me neither1I have never seen that before. My 14 bolt is through the backing plate, dad’s 9” on the bronco is the backing plate, my last dodge was through the backing plate. Learned something new today.
Water mixed with 90 weight.Help!? Oh the surprises I keep finding. Was getting ready to pull the front axle out for paint tomorrow since I'm off work and decided to drain the gear oil tonight. It's been a long time since I've drained an open diff like this one. I'm assuming the peanut butter colored stuff is mud and water? I've changed the diffs in my old Jimmy a few times and in a few other trucks but I've never seen one with this in it. I tried to clean some of it out with parts cleaner and a paper towel, which is what you're seeing in the drain pan. I tipped the axle up a little too so it would drain better. I did not find any metal shavings or any signs of scoring, which I thought was a good sign. Axle wasn't making any noise that I was aware of before the change. I have never mudded the truck personally, but I'm no fool, I know the PO rode it pretty hard. Anyone with more experience care to chime in.
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Yeah if there was a spec of rust and you covered it, with freezing temperatures it will fester and eventually seep out.Made some good progress today but found something I didn't want to find too while working on it. The first few pictures are the brackets, that went together just fine, but when I got ready clean the frame. I noticed that rust is bleeding through the paint. Based on what I've researched, it appears I've got two options. I can have the frame sandblasted again and treat it better with an encapsulator or white phosphate like I did the body. I did a really good job on the prep work. I learned there must have been microscopic rust in some of the frame. From what I read this can happen from time to time but I wiped it down really good and did everything I thought I was supposed to to a tee before I painted it back in the fall the day after the sandblasting. You all know how meticulous I am if you've been following along. The thing has two coats of epoxy and two coats of ceramic chassis paint. You would think it would have smothered what little rust would have been left after the blasting. Nonetheless, the other option is to just go ahead and spot treat the rust and then paint it. I'm doing that now with rust encapsulator. I have no idea if it'll work long-term but I do not have the funds this summer to afford to have it blasted and afford to buy all that paint again. It was very expensive. Really bums me out because my OCD can't stand it but I'm kind of stuck. At the end of the day, it's just a truck and it'll never be in the elements like that and no one will be able to tell once I've painted it. The frame was in the lean to over the past 9 months and exposed to lots of rain and even some snow blew in on it. That paint is supposed to resist all that. So who knows what happened. It's more prevalent on the side that was closer to where all the rain and snow would have hit it so that's how I figured it out. Anyways, long rant over. I'm hoping tomorrow to get the final coat on it and be done with that part. I am tired of painting things.
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I was going to say it didn't look like it had much paint on it from the picture, when you said how many coats you put on, that didn't translate in the pictureHad to finish up a little early today but I got started in time to get the paint on the frame and some other small parts. It looks good for now. Fingers crossed that it holds up to the test of time once the truck's actually on the road. I'm thinking now part of the problem that rust came through in spots was because I didn't get enough paint on them the first time. I noticed this because when I painted it in the driveway in the sunshine I could see a lot of mistakes that I couldn't see when I painted it in the lean to back in the fall. I won't work on it again till next week, I'm expecting to start routing, fuel and brake lines. It should look really sharp once it's dressed back out.
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I like it, but hate the price and the 48hr pot life once it's activiated. It is a little finicky to use for what you pay. It will not spray well if you get near tilting it 45 degrees in either direction. I keep old nozzles around to to avoid clogs. I clean them out with brake cleaner when I use up a can. Overall all though, it gives the look I'm going for. That said, if I get chips or areas that need touching up in the future, RustOleum satin black is a dead match. I'm really hoping it can hold up overtime. It is for sure hard once it fully cures. I've hit some with wire wheel before for a touch and it resisted it pretty good for spray paint.Frame is looking good now.
How do you like that spray paint?
Yea the pictures upload in a weird order every time I use my phone which doesn't help either. I got it on there pretty good now though. Nothing beats painting in the sunlight, I used that white so I would know if I missed a spot, but I painted those spots and the whole entire thing with a thick final coat.I was going to say it didn't look like it had much paint on it from the picture, when you said how many coats you put on, that didn't translate in the picture
Rustoleum is plenty good enough for inner fender and parts underneath.I'm so over painting. Fortunately, I think at least for now I'm done painting stuff for a little bit. At least stuff people can see and I have to work real hard on. I clear coated a bunch of junk that probably didn't need to be clear coated. These past couple of days have felt pretty redundant but nonetheless, got some brand new hardware to hold the brake and fuel lines from inline tubing clear coated. I painted all those brackets. I did the inner fender wells too, they came out like crap. Not real sure why since I did the same prep on every part. Maybe it was the heat since we're in the heat dome down here in the South whatever the heck that means. I'm basically out of the high dollar paint at this point. I don't know that I'm going to get back in that game. Side-by-side comparison satin black Rust-Oleum in a can looks just like the 2K ceramic stuff and is a quarter of the cost. I assume if I'm using a self-etching or epoxy primer underneath it'll do its job so I guess I'm going to go back to Rust-Oleum. It's definitely much easier to work with. Anyways, here's a photo dump of a bunch of boring random stuff. Next step from here is assembling the frame and preparing it to go under the truck.
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Yeah I think that's where I'm at at this point. That stuff went up another $10 a can almost since I bought it last. It's just too expensive for what I'm trying to do. I'm happy with it on the frame and the floor though but I think you're right. There's been Rust-Oleum on our 79 Jimmy chassis for over 20 years now and it's still not rusted out.Rustoleum is plenty good enough for inner fender and parts underneath.
I would save the better paint for outside body parts only
I actually didn't know this. Ironically, there is a mixture of poly and rubber and to the best of my knowledge, all of the poly bushings that I tightened were on full weight. The rubber ones I did while they were still suspended. Good to know though for future reference. I still haven't torqued the body mounts. I'm going to loosen them up and give it a nudge. I think I'm about 3/16 from being square. Pretty good considering I eyeballed it when I dropped it on the frame. I used a lot of marine grease on the suspension bushings. Energy suspension and I think prothane both highly recommend marine grease and I wasn't going to go broke buying their grease and they said that Lucas Marine would be adequate.Did you use rubber or polyurethane bushings? Final torque on suspension bushing bolts like leaf springs is best with full weight on them, especially with poly bushings.