Cab Floor Dimensions Please
First time posting here, but I am rebuilding a 52 Suburban. Can someone measure the width of their floor where it the doors meet the cab? The floor and firewall were all rotted out and I am replacing them with new sheetmetal. One issue is that the body now appears to be torqued. The rear half sits evenly on the frame, but the front half (same as the truck cab) is shifted towards the passenger side (or the driver's side is moved in). The dimensions from frame rail to cab are different by 1.5 inches. It is affecting how the doors close and I don't have the fenders or hood on, so I want to make sure that it is correct before welding everything up. Can someone measure the total width between the door posts on the front of the cab where it meets the floor? It would also be great to get some dimensions from the door kickplate to the frame if you can get under the truck to measure. Thanks so much to anyone that can help!
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Re: Cab Floor Dimensions Please
This is kinda hard, I can do this on my cab right now but can you measure it the same? The overhang of metal is probably different cab to cab truck to truck.
Brian |
Re: Cab Floor Dimensions Please
4 Attachment(s)
Ok, I just measured my cab. I don't have a suburban, but you are saying the front of the cab is the same, which makes sense.
Ok, the first picture is showing how I made the first measurement laying right on the top of the rear of the seat frame, I don't know if the suburban has one like this but here you go with this measurement. We are talking windlace holder to windlace holder, 60 and 3/16 inches. The next photo shows me using a tram to measure exactly down where the door jamb meets the floor. I put the tip right exactly as you see on the other side as well, so this is a perfect measurement of my cab. The third photo shows where I am a little better so you have a good idea. The forth is the measuring tape laying right on that tram with the distance of 57 and 3/4 inches. And here is an "Basics of Basics" to using or making a tram and how to measure stuff like this. http://www.hotrodders.com/forum/basi...ng-319474.html If the Photoscumbucket photos don't open for you, let me know, I have them saved and I can post them. I really need to post this here with the photos so they will be saved instead of on photoscumbucket. Brian |
Re: Cab Floor Dimensions Please
there's several burb builds here but like martin said this is tuff...2 people may measure different and no 2 trucks are the same. ....I would try to level and square the body up as best you can....get the twist out of it.....get it so the doors open and close.....you really need the front end on it and fitting... (a lot of work).if you didn't weld in crossbraces I would do that...remember you may have to move them later.some adjustment of your crossbracing may be needed....you need to have everything right before you start welding...
have you cut out the old floor and firewall yet? |
Re: Cab Floor Dimensions Please
just compared martins measurements to my cab
martin............. mine 60 3/16..............61 57 3/4.............57 1/2 I also measured across the floor board from kick panel to kick panel...right where the kick panel meets the floor board at the door opening, I got 52 3/8 |
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Brian |
Re: Cab Floor Dimensions Please
2 Attachment(s)
Sorry, I should have just said the door kickplate. I tried to post pictures here, so please let me know if you can see them. I am trying to find dimension between the two front door pillars and also from the door kickplate at the front door pillar to the frame (as shown in the photo).
Thanks! |
Re: Cab Floor Dimensions Please
On that your best bet and least headaches is to square it up, fit the doors making sure that the door gaps are right where you want them and then brace the daylights out of it so nothing moves before starting to replace any metal .
It doesn't matter how much you are going to replace if it isn't all lined up and squared up before you start you end up welding in more issues than you fix. Been there, done that before anyone ever showed bracing and cross bracing of a cab. That was also before the internet when the how to articles in magazines often assumed that we might know a lot more than we did. |
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