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Old 09-26-2010, 01:13 AM   #1
hgs_notes
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

So the new driver side frame horn is made, but I did not weld it on yet.


Instead, I fabbed a new piece for the pass side, which was in real bad shape.


This one took more work. I made a pattern based off the shape it is supposed to be.



Since I really couldn't use any of the original horn, I used 3 sections of the burb one to make a very close replica of it. I cut the end of the burb horn off, wiich is much shorter than the jimmy one from the bend back. Then I cut the bushing mount area of the burb one. I placed those 2 sections on the pattern, and used a piece of the burb horn that was excess and cut it to fit between the two.



I think it turned out pretty good. It cost me $30 for the burb frame pieces, and a couple hours of my time. Even if I just used some truck frame sections, which I had, I still would have had to section and weld it in, and get the bushing mount holes cut in, and then find inner bumper brackets because this never had them.
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Old 09-26-2010, 01:36 AM   #2
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

I figured I was overdue on my accounting, so I just added it up. I was at $1003, and have since bought bushings for the rear leafs and shackles and t-case, e-brake cables, new exhaust system, the frame pieces, a fender and tailgate, a gas tank and the chassis paint, which all together cost me $614. I sold the old jimmy dash and some side moulding for $60, scrapped the old body for $50 bringing the balance to $1507.

Is that good or bad? It'll have new brakes, exhaust, reconditioned frame, new bushings and mounts, gas tank, and a bunch of original rust free body parts. The downside is that it's not running, will need some significant body work, and more hours than I care to think about right now.
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Old 09-26-2010, 08:52 AM   #3
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

It's coming along nicely; and the amount invested looks good to me. My project is nowhere near as far along and my budget is way higher right now.
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Old 09-26-2010, 09:06 AM   #4
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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It's coming along nicely; and the amount invested looks good to me. My project is nowhere near as far along and my budget is way higher right now.
I could have done it cheaper, but but not by much. When a fifth of the total build cost is headers and exhaust, I guess I'm doing ok. Some things just can't be avoided, like the brake cables and other brake rebuild parts, all bought new. The project has just evolved over the years.
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Old 09-27-2010, 09:25 AM   #5
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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...bringing the balance to $1507.

Is that good or bad? I'll have new brakes, exhaust, reconditioned frame, new bushings and mounts, gas tank, and a bunch of original rust free body parts. The downside is that it's not running, will need some significant body work, and more hours than I care to think about right now.
It's all good. The hours will be well spent. What would you be doing if you did not have this project to keep you amused? Sitting on a couch with a remote and 'tato chips? Sitting at a bar getting wasted? I've been getting a machine shop put together in my basement. The way *I* see it is when I am downstairs working on a project, my wife definately knows where I am at and what I am doing.

Oh....I was also going to mention....did you put any plastic down to catch the sand? You can possibly reuse the sand at least once if you could come up with a way to strain some of the larger chunks out.

Your project looks great.

Mike
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Old 09-28-2010, 08:12 PM   #6
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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It's all good. The hours will be well spent. What would you be doing if you did not have this project to keep you amused?

Working on my other truck project...:

Oh....I was also going to mention....did you put any plastic down to catch the sand? You can possibly reuse the sand at least once if you could come up with a way to strain some of the larger chunks out.

I didn't use plastic, but I did vacuum it up and put it through a screen. I used it up today, see below.

Your project looks great.
Thanks
Mike
Ok, got the engine pulled...


Then started blasting. I got some way cheaper sand at the lumber yard here in town. Like $10 for a 100 lb bag.



The other side bottom...



And there she sits, waiting for a little more cleaning and a coat of sticky black goo.

Last edited by hgs_notes; 09-28-2010 at 11:24 PM.
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Old 09-27-2010, 12:14 AM   #7
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Got the new frame horns welded on, and the rear crossmember replaced.



Then I took a few minutes with a hammer and wood block and pounded out most of the dent on the driver side fender.


I brought the pass side fender to my neighbor. He's a body guy and should be able to hammer out the dents a lot better than me. I think for now I'm going to let the rear shackles stay as they are. The tires I have a line on right now are just 32" and a lift isn't needed. Most say you can run 33" tires without a lift on these. If I feel the need later, I'll have the parts to do it.

So the plan for the week:
Pull engine/tranny/t-case Done
Finish sandblasting Done
Paint frame Done
Replace engine with my rebuilt shortblock
Re-install engine/tranny/t-case
Install exhaust
Install gas tank
Primer underside of tub
Install tub

We'll see if I can get that far before I make my list of what's next.

Last edited by hgs_notes; 09-29-2010 at 06:40 PM.
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Old 09-28-2010, 08:30 PM   #8
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Nice progress and good work on the frame horns.
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Old 09-28-2010, 11:30 PM   #9
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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Nice progress and good work on the frame horns.
Thanks. I was kinda surprised how well it cleaned up. Considering the rust in the frame I had to fix, it could have been much worse after blasting, but I didn't really find any other trouble spots.

Going to try and paint the chassis tomorrow.
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Old 09-29-2010, 06:38 PM   #10
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

I ended up doing a little more sandblasting, found some areas I missed. Then finished cleaning it up. The biggest challenge was the rear axle. I have no idea how that thing was so grimy. I scraped it, wire brushed it, sprayed it with brake cleaner, sand blasted, not necessarily in that order. I removed some narly exhaust hangers, and checked it over and decided it was good enough. So I painted it. The summit chassis paint mixed up good and sprayed real good. The only obstacles I had were my cheap spray gun that failed half way through the first batch of spraying ( I used my other gun for the first time), the wind, some stuff blowing out of the tree by the driveway, and working around all the crap mounted up front yet. The hardest thing about spraying the frame is getting around the spring hangers and where the crossmembers meet the frame rails and around the front suspension.


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Old 09-29-2010, 10:34 PM   #11
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Looks great!!! Nice work...I think a painted frame is a very rewarding thing (it is for me at least) gives you a real sense of accomplishment and means you're going to start working with clean parts now.
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Old 09-29-2010, 11:32 PM   #12
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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Looks great!!! Nice work...I think a painted frame is a very rewarding thing (it is for me at least) gives you a real sense of accomplishment and means you're going to start working with clean parts now.
To me, it means it's time for stuff to start going back together. Tomorrow I think I'll try and get the driveline back in it.
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Old 09-30-2010, 11:34 AM   #13
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

It's really moving along Mike. At this rate you should be going topless by summer.
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Old 09-30-2010, 12:26 PM   #14
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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It's really moving along Mike. At this rate you should be going topless by summer.
Not quite, well maybe, but you are formally invited to come over this weekend and help me throw the pile back together. I'll provide the food and beverages.
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Old 09-30-2010, 12:33 PM   #15
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

I love what your doing,This is how true hot rodding started out.Not openning your wallet but looking and making what you found work.Keep it up.
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Old 09-30-2010, 10:41 PM   #16
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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I love what your doing,This is how true hot rodding started out.Not openning your wallet but looking and making what you found work.Keep it up.
Thanks, but my wallet hasn't been ignored.

Todays progress was not quite as much as I had hoped. I did a lot of work, but the drivetrain is not in yet. I stripped the engine down and pulled it from the tranny.



I started installing some of the parts onto the new shortblock. I went to the local junkyard and found some heads to use. Not the vortecs I was planning on, but an old set of 283 heads with 60 cc chambers. They are soaking in the parts washer tonight. I think the rockers and rocker balls are shot, too much rust. I'll pull the ones from the old engine along with the push rods. I should be able to use the recycled intake also. Good thing I had almost a complete set of gaskets laying on the shelf. I should be able to get the engine back together tomorrow and if it gets bolted to the tranny, I'll set it in place.

I did manage to clean up the tranny/t-case and spray some rattle cans at it. I'll still have to fix the leaks, but at least they'll be cleaner parts to work with.
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Old 10-01-2010, 12:44 AM   #17
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Amazing what a little rattle can can do, huh? Looks like you put in a bunch of work today....keep at it! You'll have a driver in no time!
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Old 10-02-2010, 11:40 PM   #18
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Took a day off from the project yesterday, and today I worked on getting the drive train back in. The biggest issue here was getting the new bushings in for the t-case mount to the frame. After a couple tries, I figured it out though.


Finished the day by hooking up the drive shafts.


No major obstacles, but found out the heads I picked won't work out. No accessory holes for mounting the alternator. Also, some of the exhaust seats were fried probably because they were not hardened. So I'm going to return them and keep looking.

I put one on the engine just to have something to mount a header onto. Before tear down I did some mock up on the exhaust kit I got. The pipe from the pass side header didn't seem to fit right, so I played around a bit today with the routing and think I have it figured out. Worst case is that I''ll pull the heads off the old engine, put in some new valve seals and swap them later when I have the vortecs or equivalent I want. I would like to be able to mount the exhaust before the body goes on. I'll work on that tomorrow and get the new gas tank mounted. Depending on time I'll see if I can get the new tub in the driveway.
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Old 10-03-2010, 03:11 AM   #19
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

nice job looks good
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Old 10-03-2010, 11:55 PM   #20
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Today was unproductive. The only thing I really got done was installing the shift linkage. The gas tank needed cleaning, and is still being cleaned. The exhaust has a wierd bent pipe. Summit wasn't really able to help so I have to call hooker monday and see if I can get the right pipe sent. See how the top pipe bends at the collector? That is enough of an angle to put the rear into the driveshaft.


I took the heads off the old engine just to use them as mock ups, and found water in one of the cylinders. That probably explains why it was running so poorly.


It just wasn't going well today so I stopped and put some effort into the yard work, the house, etc. I took one pull too many on the push mower recoil cord, so I fixed that also. That's the way it goes sometimes, my good fortune last week must have run out. My goal is still just to get it back into one rolling pile. If the weather holds I should be able to meet that.
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Old 10-04-2010, 05:11 PM   #21
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Couple of milestones here. Over 300 posts and almost 30,000 views. Thanks for the encouragement. Got the heads returned, no problems. Talked to Hooker Exhaust today. Technology has certainly come a long ways. While on the phone with them, they emailed me pictures of their first set up install for me to compare with. Then I set the pipe in like he tells me and still have a problem where it tightens to the header collector. So i take a pic and email it back, all while on the cell phone. I should hear back by tuesday, they are going to see if they have a new pipe around to ship me.
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Old 10-04-2010, 07:18 PM   #22
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

I just read this whole thread...really enjoyed it and it made me late for work as I was caught up with it this morning. It alternately made me search Craigslist to buy my own Blazer and then reconsider the thought at the point in the story when you killed the starter(I did that to a Bronco project too and had to sacrifice a really nice truck as it was stuck on the street and I had no parking place for it )
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Old 10-04-2010, 07:23 PM   #23
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

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I just read this whole thread...really enjoyed it and it made me late for work as I was caught up with it this morning. It alternately made me search Craigslist to buy my own Blazer and then reconsider the thought at the point in the story when you killed the starter(I did that to a Bronco project too and had to sacrifice a really nice truck as it was stuck on the street and I had no parking place for it )
Glad you enjoyed it. I've been lucky in that I know people that will let me keep my junk at their place.
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Old 10-05-2010, 11:32 AM   #24
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

I'm really psyched to see stuff going back together for you. It's got to be nice to walk out in the morning and see that nice black frame sitting there.
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Old 10-05-2010, 02:54 PM   #25
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Re: Junkyard Jimmy Super Low Buck Build Thread

Got caught up with your progress since I was on last...whew, it's become a whole different blazer.

Keep the faith, it'll come together soon enough.
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