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-   -   My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade (https://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/showthread.php?t=622971)

Low Elco 05-05-2014 10:46 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Congrats on the running 4X4!

Sodell 05-05-2014 10:54 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Glad you got it running! Any issues with the TBI/ECU?

killthewabbit 05-05-2014 11:47 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
You know, I'm pretty sure Rustoleum comes in a cream color that's a decent match for the factory cream. Would make a good candidate for a rolled on job

Tx Firefighter 05-06-2014 12:27 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
I've been pushing on the 4x4 lately. I can't do serious work to the stepside without having another pickup to drive around while its torn apart. The 4x4 needs tires and I've been mulling over my options. I followed this thread .....click here....and want a similar look to my k2500.

Pic from above link.....

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...d7da76f67b.jpg

And I was trolling Craiglsist at the fire station yesterday.....

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...e6acb9ea1d.jpg

So when I got off work this morning I took a detour on my way home....

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...d3bfcb2c02.jpg

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...1da3e50081.jpg

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...8084f95a7e.jpg

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...bbcdc8ec99.jpg

I didn't really have the money on this paycheck cycle, but I made it work anyway. That was a very good deal for those wheels. I like aluminum wheels and factory aluminum wheels are top quality.

On the stepside subject, I had some straight up generosity from another member on here. I got a box in the mail yesterday. Here is step number one to the airbag suspension.

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...ceb89f6856.jpg

flashed 05-06-2014 12:30 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Those are nice .

68Timber 05-06-2014 01:07 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by flashed (Post 6662013)
Those are nice .

Slightly better shape than the Alcoas were at first.:lol: Nice score.

Tx Firefighter 05-06-2014 01:09 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
I'm probably gonna order a set of those goofy Buckshot Mudder tires for them and bolt em on. No wheel restoration for me right now. I well remember the Alocas.

Gmc-76 05-06-2014 01:21 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...b8b6e09472.jpg

Tx Firefighter, how did you mount the 88-94 wheel? How hard was it to do? I have a 88 parts truck with that wheel and my 85 has the stock wheel...its too big for my liking.:smoke:

MalibuSSwagon 05-06-2014 01:27 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Gmc-76 (Post 6662071)
http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...b8b6e09472.jpg

Tx Firefighter, how did you mount the 88-94 wheel? How hard was it to do? I have a 88 parts truck with that wheel and my 85 has the stock wheel...its too big for my liking.:smoke:

It's a bolt on replacement for the stock wheel, I put one in my 86.

Gmc-76 05-06-2014 03:58 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
How do you pull the steering wheel off?

ChevDog1 05-06-2014 04:00 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
steering wheel puller - but i usually just pull them off with a few solid tugs (of course after removing the nut!)

83GMCK2500 05-06-2014 04:02 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Those PY0's look like they are in GREAT shape with just a little dust on them. That factory clear is pretty thick, perhaps a quick once-over with something like the headlight restorer polish will make them pop. I can totally understand your decision to bolt-on and go after the Alcoa experience...that was intense. Happy to see and hear that the 4x4 is slowly coming together for you.

The plans you've laid out for the stepside and your recent updates are definitely interesting. It'll be great to see this truck evolve and progress as well.

Stoney 05-06-2014 05:08 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
That's a steal on those wheels. Nice...

Tx Firefighter 05-06-2014 05:25 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
The talk about pulling steering wheels made me think of an opportunity for some low buck tech.

For a good number of years, I worked as a mechanic for the US Postal Service. Probably one of the top five repairs we did on the mail trucks was repair complaint of "turn signal won't cancel". That's a cancel spring every time. The part was like 7 cents but you had to pull the steering wheel to change it. So, a bunch of us built these rock solid little steering wheel pullers. The beauty of them is no moving parts to get lost and they are small and easy to carry in your toolbox.

I bet I've pulled over 1000 steering wheels with this little puller. You just start the two bolts into the holes in the steering wheel and tighten them back and forth. By the time you've tightened each one about two turns, the wheel is loose.

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...1c4cf2678b.jpg

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...68bb79a449.jpg

http://i276.photobucket.com/albums/k...8ca724df64.jpg

I've got a nice commercial steering wheel puller kit in the box with all of the fancy bolts and stuff, but it's too much trouble juggling all that crap when this little fella works every single time. Nothing to lose and fits in your pocket with ease. All you need is a little hunk of steel, a drill, two 5/16 bolts and some nuts and washers. I did a majority of my mail truck fixing on the tailgate of my service truck in post office parking lots all over the North Texas area. My tools were in a tool bag and the lighting was often by flashlight. Simple, bulletproof tools with nothing to lose is the order of the day in those cases.

Edited to add, in looking at the pictures I guess I should swap a couple of fresh bolts into it. Those have about exceeded their service life. After 19 years....

Tx Firefighter 05-06-2014 05:35 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by 83GMCK2500 (Post 6662280)
Those PY0's look like they are in GREAT shape with just a little dust on them. That factory clear is pretty thick, perhaps a quick once-over with something like the headlight restorer polish will make them pop. I can totally understand your decision to bolt-on and go after the Alcoa experience...that was intense. Happy to see and hear that the 4x4 is slowly coming together for you.

The plans you've laid out for the stepside and your recent updates are definitely interesting. It'll be great to see this truck evolve and progress as well.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stoney (Post 6662369)
That's a steal on those wheels. Nice...

Thank you. They're in very nice shape under the dust. The guy who sold them to me was driving a 65k dollar King Ranch Super Duty diesel and wasn't interested in negotiating so I had to pay full price. He wasn't a car guy at all apparently, the wheels were just sitting in his garage for the last 10 years after he had removed them from his truck back then.

aotte1 05-06-2014 05:44 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Like the wheels too, agree really strong, run them also on 1986, CUCV M1008 1ton with Michelin 2.5 ton tires, the tall ones. Do some cross country driving in woods and they have stood up well.
Les

aotte1 05-06-2014 05:58 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
1 Attachment(s)
Kevin,
Wheels on CUCV, just back from cross country woods trip picking up firewood. Les

MalibuSSwagon 05-06-2014 07:29 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Kevin, thanks for the tip on the steering wheel tool! First wheel I tried to pull for my C10 was a really nice leather wrapped one like in your truck. I couldn't pull it off since I had no tool! was really pissed about that. Second time I tried in another yard, it popped right off by hand! No tool. Of course it was the basic rubber wheel, but anything was better than the little grant wheel. :lol:

crashz 05-08-2014 02:14 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Any pics of the 4x4? I quickly looked for a build thread, but only found the flat bed build.

Speaking of that, you said that you can't start the step side build until the 4x4 is finished, but you still have the dually right? I'm guessing with the deep gears and big block, you'd rather not daily drive that thing until the big hauls are needed.

Nice puller!

Tx Firefighter 05-08-2014 03:23 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by crashz (Post 6664977)
Any pics of the 4x4? I quickly looked for a build thread, but only found the flat bed build.

Speaking of that, you said that you can't start the step side build until the 4x4 is finished, but you still have the dually right? I'm guessing with the deep gears and big block, you'd rather not daily drive that thing until the big hauls are needed.

Nice puller!

You're on the right track there. The more I drive the dually the less I like it. I'm kind of frustrated with it right now so I pulled the insurance and parked it next to my shop. I'm kind of afraid once I start driving the 4x4 I will like it enough that the dually will be hardly ever driven again. I am weird in that once I go cold on a truck, my interest often doesn't rekindle. Hence the reason I sold my TOTM 63 SWB a few years ago only a few months after finishing it. The 4x4 will do almost anything the dually will and it's the much nicer, IMO, body style truck to live with as a daily driver.

SCOTI 05-08-2014 03:39 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Tx Firefighter (Post 6665080)
You're on the right track there. The more I drive the dually the less I like it. I'm kind of frustrated with it right now so I pulled the insurance and parked it next to my shop. I'm kind of afraid once I start driving the 4x4 I will like it enough that the dually will be hardly ever driven again. I am weird in that once I go cold on a truck, my interest often doesn't rekindle. Hence the reason I sold my TOTM 63 SWB a few years ago only a few months after finishing it. The 4x4 will do almost anything the dually will and it's the much nicer, IMO, body style truck to live with as a daily driver.

Say what?

lolife99 05-08-2014 03:44 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
SUPER deal on the GM aluminum wheels.
I'm stealing your steering wheel puller idea also.
I'm gonna go home and measure the center -to-center spacing on and old steering wheel and build one.
Any chance you would be selling your dually?

Tx Firefighter 05-08-2014 03:52 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by SCOTI (Post 6665101)
Say what?

I can't explain it Scot. There's no logic to it I guess.

I'm way underwater on the truck financially (of course) and it's about half the truck I hoped it to be when I started driving it. I don't want to throw any more money at it right now.

Tx Firefighter 05-08-2014 03:57 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lolife99 (Post 6665107)
SUPER deal on the GM aluminum wheels.
I'm stealing your steering wheel puller idea also.
I'm gonna go home and measure the center -to-center spacing on and old steering wheel and build one.
Any chance you would be selling your dually?

The critical thing on the puller is to build it as narrow as the two bolts will allow. These thick padded wheels like the one on this truck require the puller to fit down inside the center well of the wheel. You've got to make it narrow. Not so much for earlier wheels, but you might as well build it to fit all wheels. To my knowledge, the bolt spacing is the same on all GM wheels. I've pulled everything from 1954 to 1994 model steering wheels with it. Notice the slack in the bolts and the locknuts. That allows the bolts to be free spinning inside of the steel plate.

I'd sell the dually, but its a moot point I guess. With the money I have into it, I'd likely be out of line on my asking price. You guys know what kind of money I invested in the build, but your typical buyer sees flaky paint and bad interior and would classify me as a crack head on my price.

crashz 05-08-2014 04:55 PM

Re: My daily driver/beater : How I turned lemons in lemonade
 
A working dually is a funny rig. They have no really capacity over a 3/4ton, either practically or legally when equipped witha commercial body. They are just really heavy and usually laden with a heavy body.

The one advantage is towing. I really like a dually when towing.

Keeping me waiting on the 4x4 pics? Is it wrong to beg? :lol:


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