MountainmanID
1/2 ton status
I thought those were parts from a factory LSD.I might be wrong. Missed the middlepic...
I'm gonna try it and see how well it holds up with 35-37"s. Worst case it'll get a lockright like the front.
Anybody ever used the repair panels to re-do a floor in a K5?
I got a big JEGs shipment today along with another quart of rust bullet:
Putting the front and rear repair panels together ends up with close to a foot of overlap that I'm not sure why it exists.
I dropped the rear panel in the truck and it extends to where the floor starts to ramp up towards the firewall:
Got most of the front passenger OEM panel out, just grinding out the spot welds that attach it to the longitudinal brace that runs the length of the cab floor:
I'm working on building an inner room inside the shop to basically close off my truck area with 6 MIL plastic sheeting with some 2x4 frame walls and ceiling so I can put in a 12kBTU AC unit to run a hour before I start working and while to make the work space a little more comfortable. It'll also keep a lot of the dust contained which will make my landlord/shop renter happier. I basically have 2 big pedestal fans blowing on me while I'm working but still end up quitting due to sweat after 3-4 hours when I could be working for 7-8 hours each time so it's stretching out my project longer than it should take. It's 94 degrees outside and inside the shop isn't much better. This is fairly humid for this neck of the woods:
I'll finally have the automotive accessory I've always wanted in this truck, just gotta find the matching accelerator pedal:
Any insight on the floor repair strategy would be appreciated.
I'm not sure whether to cut out the entire floor that will be replaced by the panels, or just use the section of replacement panel needed to fix the rust. The rear floor pan panel has a flat back instead of the slow bend with the humps in it that leads up to the rear floor. I guess the pickups are built like this so they tried to make one panel that "could work" on either vehicle. I like the idea of sealing off the original panel with rust bullet then doubling up the floor with the new panels spot welded to the old panel every 4" or so. Should make one stout floor by the time everything is welded together then bed linered.