The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network

The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network (https://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/index.php)
-   The 1967 - 1972 Chevrolet & GMC Pickups Message Board (https://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/forumdisplay.php?f=3)
-   -   A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4 (https://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/showthread.php?t=335022)

texanidiot25 03-22-2009 11:48 PM

A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
:metal:


And check out this bad boy:

67/72junkie 03-22-2009 11:55 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
to cool!I like it!

sleepertruck72 03-23-2009 12:06 AM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
That truck is awesome !:chevy:
Thanks for posting the video !!!

IvelDesigns 03-23-2009 12:33 AM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
bad A-ass!!

enaberif 03-23-2009 12:36 AM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
both those trucks are pure awesome!

bowtieboy93 03-23-2009 12:55 AM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
i want the seconds setup in the 67

both are killer!

bw4sale 03-23-2009 12:21 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Drool, drool, drool.

69halfton 03-23-2009 01:38 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
wow i thought they were just crappy movie trucks, but what awsum haulers either of them would be.

love that 572 in the crew cab:metal:

ProStreet83C10 03-23-2009 01:55 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
too bad they didnt actually put a diesel in the 67......im not much of a gasser truck with stacks type of guy.

Beetle 06-09-2009 03:12 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
So how could I make a replica of that 67? What is a ladder suspension, or would a 4 link like something from air ride work? And what kinda tires are on the back, looks to be big rig alcoa's.

BAGNDRAGIT 06-09-2009 05:32 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
:metal: both are sick!!!!

Big J'72 GMC 06-09-2009 09:29 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
gotta admit, got a copy from a buddy of mine, and as soon as I saw that '67 I squealed like a little girl, would love the crewcab to tho

1971 GMC SHORTY 06-09-2009 09:38 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
3 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Beetle (Post 3351176)
So how could I make a replica of that 67? What is a ladder suspension, or would a 4 link like something from air ride work? And what kinda tires are on the back, looks to be big rig alcoa's.

i helped build those trucks and gars got pictures...

1971 GMC SHORTY 06-09-2009 09:53 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
3 Attachment(s)
ok heres some more

oldblue1968chevy 06-09-2009 10:01 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
^^^^thats sweet man, i wish i could say to my buddys after they saw the movie


'i built that truck' lol man thats cool!!

1971 GMC SHORTY 06-09-2009 10:08 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by oldblue1968chevy (Post 3351871)
^^^^thats sweet man, i wish i could say to my buddys after they saw the movie


'i built that truck' lol man thats cool!!

The best is seeing your name in the Credits at the End of the Movie
Daniel Sanchez....

Beetle 06-10-2009 05:10 AM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Well Daniel you are the man I need to talk to once I get my truck. I have decided I am gonna do a replica of that truck, mines gonna have a 454/T400 in it, or if I can find me a 6.6 Duramax/Allison combo that's what I will do.

cadillacart 06-10-2009 07:44 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Amazing and creative work. I haven't seen that movie yet, now I will.

hicktownhotrodder 07-10-2009 03:59 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
man, now i gotta build my ol chevy like that!:lol: were did the alcoa wheel setup come from? ive been thinking about a super single setup on my truck but havnt figured out to make the ten bolt(or have eight bolts made OUCH) wheels work.

JohnC 07-10-2009 04:30 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Those are awesome trucks. Congrats Daniel on the work!

gerfunken 07-10-2009 06:18 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Beetle (Post 3352290)
Well Daniel you are the man I need to talk to once I get my truck. I have decided I am gonna do a replica of that truck, mines gonna have a 454/T400 in it, or if I can find me a 6.6 Duramax/Allison combo that's what I will do.

I stumbled onto a site where a guy is doing a durmax lb7 in his 72 k20...

http://viewmorepics.myspace.com/inde...lbumId=2759020

Haven't seen his truck on this site......

hicktownhotrodder 07-12-2009 08:34 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Well that means that we need to make him a member so we can ask more questions:lol:

CSGAS 07-12-2009 09:46 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Beetle,

Shorty's second set of photos show the ladder bar setup.

In concept, a ladder bar suspension and a trailing arm setup (like our truck arms) are the same arrangement; consisting of links directly attached to the solid or live axle which moves up and down, some locating method to prevent side-to-side movement, and forward pivot mechanisms to connect the assembly to the chassis.

In application, ladder bars are generally used when higher strength is required ( note the hefty tubes) and usually get a straight forward-to-back geometry instead of being pointed towards the middle of the chassis at the front like our truck arms or "split wishbones" or other more "civilian" applications of the approach are.

Also, ladder bars end up usually welded to the axle instead of bolted (there are exceptions) and the most accepted locator is a diagonal "triangulation" bar running from the lower rear attachment point on one side all the way to the front pivot point of the other side; instead of a track bar.

This arrangement shows it advantages in straight-line driving, since independant movement of the left and right ladder bars is generally limited if possible at all. The geometry of the front pivot points works to aid transfer of weight to the rear axle area, to aid traction. As a general rule, the lower the pivot points are and the longer the bars are, the better.

If you are building a chassis from scratch or for a leaf-sprung ride that you intent to race or exhibit, ladder bars are a respectable setup. If you want a dual-purpose ride or you already have a truck-arm equipped ride, I'd suggest mods that make the truck arms behave like ladder bars instead since they can take a bump in the road on just one side of the truck, or turns, or...

...Mods like this include boxed or tubular bolt-on truck arms; with large hiem-joint, monoball, or custom bushed front pivots points; relocated front pivot points (many shops sell plates with slotted or multiple holes); adjustable coil-overs; a Watts-link setup instead of a triangulating bar (since street driving is the reason for my rambling) and downtubes from a roll cage to a point just above the axle to help the weight transfer go where it's supposed to.

For a (presumably) lightweight trailer queen, ladder bars would also need the downtubes and usually use coilovers. While it seems like they should be available to bolt into the stock truck arm mounts, that would cause binding and geometry that defeats the usual purpose of having full ladder bars. The truck-arm crossmember can still be used to mount the ladder bar pivot plates (which are also available with multiple holes for adjustments) further outboard for that straight alignment. A lot of study of your particular setup and creative engineering into the relationships is required to make sure the vehicle launches straight and hard. A drivetrain that shocks the chassis hard--like a transbraked setup--compliments this best. It's not as hard as jumping into four-links would be, and once you learn ladder bars you have a head start on understanding four-links at least for straightline acceleration. It's perfectly acceptable to need to rework it a couple times to get it right...as long as you don't kill yourself trying it out the first time!!! Have a mentor look at your particular application a few times throughout your installation and shakedown.

There are other uses for ladder bars, where strength is needed--heavy-duty trucks and some stunt cars, for example. I haven't seen FF4 yet, but I'd venture a guess the ladder bar-equipped truck had some high jumps or really rough obstacles to get over, or maybe a drifting skid that would have turned a truck arm into a pretzel.

Your local dragstrip pits on a bracket-racing weekend would be your best place to see ladder bar installations you would like, or some Nostalgia Gasser cars.

Hope you end up with whatever really makes you happy!

CSGAS 07-12-2009 09:49 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
Ahh, yes...after two months of an opressive roommate, now everyone here finally gets a taste of what I'm really like...sorry for such a run-on rambling session!!! :-D

workinprogress67 07-28-2009 04:01 PM

Re: A closer look at the 67 C10 in Fast and Furious 4
 
can you buy a rear window regulator to roll the window up and down or is that custom on the 67?


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:59 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2022 67-72chevytrucks.com