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The Willomet Charger

A desecration to Mopar nuts everywhere, this is my protouring, LS-powered, 1970 Dodge Charger; built at my shop, Willomet Motor & Fabrication.
I have nothing productive to add, just wanted to say this is a way cool project with attention to detail and patience that is way beyond my ability. I've enjoyed following along!
Thanks! I would like to drive it tomorrow, but I want it done my way. It’s a process.

David
 
Working more on the patch, I just decided to order the door post pillar from AMD. I’ll weld in just the portion I need, and in the meantime make progress on the passenger rocker beam.

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David
 
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I envy your patience, really glad you are sharing your work. Taking all those pics and writing posts takes a lot of time. I’m really enjoying seeing your progress.
 
I envy your patience, really glad you are sharing your work. Taking all those pics and writing posts takes a lot of time. I’m really enjoying seeing your progress.
Glad to share. I enjoy the build process, and am learning a lot. My only frustration is a busy day-job and travel schedule makes it difficult to maintain focus. My next two side-gig jobs are delayed, so I'm trying to get in all the time I can.

David
 
You need to quit that bothersome day job so you can get some real work done on your projects
Next best thing: I’m planning a week of vacation in the shop. With a kitchen remodel underway, we’re not taking any big trips this summer, leaving me with lots of unused PTO.

David
 
Passenger rocker beam welded and cooling. To keep the warp to a minimum, I put a 1/4” negative bend in the beam and do the normal weld spacing with an air quench. When done, I release the tension and the beam is almost perfectly straight.
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The AMD pillar is now in stock, and I’ll cut it up to make the few patches I need.

David
 
How much do you figure those puppies weigh?
They’re not light - about 44 lbs each.

Part of me wishes I had done the inner rocker plates out of 12ga, as that would have shaved almost 2 lbs per side, but 11 ga (.120) was readily available at the shop.

David
 
Rockers are in, and at one with the unibody, along with the new mid-crossmember.

I’ll have to modify it to make room for the driveshaft and exhaust, but there’s plenty of time for that.
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I took the whole day - 10 hours - to get everything perfectly level and square and parallel.
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Worth it.

David
 
Seeing your stuff makes me want to build a beater POS. I feel like somewhere there needs to be some kind of balance in life
That has merit. You’d likely get to drive it before I finish this.

Incidentally, I’m willing to sacrifice new and major upgrades on the truck (which cruises and wheels just fine) in favor of getting the car to a point where I can drive it before becoming an old man.

Perfect can be the enemy of Good.

David
 
Here's what I'm thinking about for reinforcing the factory 14ga rails.
Frame Overlay.jpg

Old school rally dudes would fully plate a frame in 1/8", which is as much about stiffening as it is about sustaining loads of abuse. I don't like the corrosion risk that would come from plating the entire frame, let alone all the added weight that comes from relying purely on material strength. And so, overlaying a truss design similar to the above is what I'm thinking, as increased beam strength is the main objective.

I think the rightmost pattern is what I'll apply across the whole of the rail.

David
 
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