CK5
Register an account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members.

big yellow tow truck

I never played with them, but whenever I see them in a junkyard, I always check them for the fuel/tach combo gauge because those only came in these C60's style. Those sell for $300 on ebay and the yards will usually let you have 'em for $20. The air gauge also only came in c60's too, it is a nice addition, I have one of those in my K5's gauge pod showing my OBA status.
 
well got to start bustin aSS on this old girl . last week or 2 I been crossing off the list of things to do .

yesterday I made these frame extensions in shop with my new toy 20ton PRESS BRAKE kit from swag offroad for the harbor fright shop press.

then today I welded them in place and fish plated the insides a bit just incase . . . and bolted the bumper back on for good after I welded a pair of tabs on for a winch mount .

1124161340a.jpg

1124161340b.jpg
 
Sweet rig!!! What are the frame extensions for, winch mount, plow mount,...?

Oh, and I say, keep it all yellow, it's awesome!!!
 
big push bumper was shoved up to the body with no real gap . so I moved it out . this also let me add a winch mount point on top of the bumper and not hit the front sheet metal .
 
some updates to this old girl .

well I asked a few old timers around town and even they had no real idea since its so old and 4x4 napco that you just don't see much of .

so I tore in to it today .

here is the run down .

pic # 1 = bottom of backing plate back side 2 adjustment bolts with jamb nuts and lock washers .

pic #2 = adjuster / shoe lower retainer unit removed / cleaned / wire wheeled to get it to work and understand how to make it adjust .

pic #3 = all cleaned up and lubed with copper anti-seize .

the jamb nuts back off just a bit .

then the pinched flat head gets turned as its a off set cam bolt . it has a round washer riding on it that the shoe lower hole sets over and all acts like a crude bearing piviot point.

the 2 pinched head adjuster bolts each have a pin mark in them to indicate were the adjustment currently is at . close together/center = new shoe or no major wear . the farther they away to the opposite sides of each other = worn out shoes and replacement of parts needed.

by the looks of it its not a 360* rotation of adjustment just a 180* range of adjustment . so you can roll the adjustment bolt each way and get the same results.

1220161446a.jpg

0101171652a.jpg

0101171700a.jpg
 
now for the upper nut /spring looking thing .

there what I think is a return limit stopper for the shoes / upper adjustment . this keeps the wheel cylinders from dropping all the way back in and having to pump the pedal up to get brakes.

pic #1 = backside of backing plate up near the 10-2 positions .

pic #2 = the closeup of the inside of the unit on the backing plate . this is a around a 360* range of motion for adjustment . so you will have to play with this to figure out what way to go . ( will be easy for me with apart )

pic #3 = whole backing plate .

the inside off set cam pushes on the brake shoe metal part its self to hold the shoe up and against the drum face .

last is a pic of the closest style of brakes to learn how to adjust them up .

1220161446b.jpg

0101171704a.jpg

2010-07-10_091855_39-42_Ford_RearBrake.jpg
 
few pics of axle turn down a bit to change bad seals for gear oil to stay in the housing and NOT the knuckle area.

fyi : stock neck-down dana 60 inner 35 spline for size refrence. 1.50inch
napco 4x4 shaft is 1.61ish dia didn't count the splines yet. not that many tho .

0102171311a.jpg

0102171312a.jpg

0102171312b.jpg

0101171646a.jpg

0102171502a.jpg
 
got my seals yesterday and installed today . r-side back together .

these seals fit like they should that for sure compared to old ones.

skf / cr 16650 seal was the closest find from measurements of seal area on shaft and seal bore in housing . they fit good and tight with seal driver and 4lb mini hammer .

0110172150a.jpg

0111171504a.jpg

0111171504b.jpg
 
removed the front cover today to clean / reseal it . . . was ozzing oil near bottom .

WOW :eek1: that diff is FULL hardly any room to fit a dime thickness between the ring gear and case body . cant even see the pinion gear . it even has a load bolt setup to control ring gear deflection . . . .old school stuff.

inside she looks just like a 14ff but MUCH BIGGER :deal:

7.20 gear ratio in there from way back then . open diff no traction device . and boy does she like gear oil almost 2 gal worth to fill up . the front napco axle

the t-case is a Rockwell t223 unit . 2.00 low range and it has a ramsey pto unit that's never been hooked up for use on the back of it . this old girl wanted 3 qrt of oil also with the drain / fill I did on it.

just about done with tinkering with this old girl and ready to go back to its home by mid week I hope . if I stop checking stuff over and finding more to fix . . . :ignore:

with the 4 speed / 2.00low / 7.20 gear / 39" tires she is 101.52 : 1 crawl ratio factory :eek: no doubler required :grin: and if she was to ever get to 70mph ( tire and safety limits ) she would be 4350rpm :shocked:
 
Last edited:
I had a T223 Rockwell divorced T-case in my '72 Chevelle Wagon 4x4 --its straight cut gears whined just like a blower,everyone thought I had one on the 454 in it..I loved the sound of that thing!..

I wish I'd kept that thing more and more--the divorced transfer case was a plus,it allowed the use on any transmission you wanted,and it didn't have to be from a 4x4 with the "special" tail shaft..

4,350 RPMs at 70 mph ?...no wonder those big trucks with Detroit's sounded like they were screaming at 50 mph!..:eek:...still think those had the coolest exhaust and "blown diesel" sound ever known..
 
@diesel4me are you sure it was a t223 and not the smaller baby brother t221 ?

the t223 is a BIG pig used in the bigger trucks . looks almost like the smaller brother t221 .

easy way to spot one is drain/fill plugs are on driver side of case for smaller t221 . . . . and bottom and front face for the t223 unit.

and yes I love the divorced case it opens stuff way up on options . just as long as you have the driveline room for it .

my buddy is looking to do a 4x4 project and the tranny he wants to run was not ever ment for a 203 range box . so we might use a divorced 203 range box and then doubler kit for a divorced doubler unit.
 
It may well have been the T221 version,it was the original from the '69 K10 Suburban frame & drivetrain the car was converted to...

I saw one huge Rockwell divorced transfer case on an old army 6x6 another salvage yard near me had..it looked just like the one I had did--but on steriods!..that is probably what your truck has..

I have seen a home built cranberry bog buggy that had two divorced transfer cases coupled together to make a doubler!.(Quadrupler ?) .thing had more shift levers than a backhoe...it could climb walls too,at like .005 mph in low gear ...still could hit 40 mph in high range !...they used it to spread sand on the bogs..
 

Latest Posts

Top Bottom