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Old 02-13-2015, 11:22 AM   #1
notchbackgta
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Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

I just bought this last weekend. It is very straight Arizona vehicle, no rust except the hatch. Drove 10 hours each way to get it. it has a newwer 454 (80's vehicle) with a TH400. Speedo is broken but I used a GPS app on my phone for the trip. Best fuel mileage was 12.4 with an average of around 11 I think. Not bad considering average speed was 67mph too.



It has a bunch of weird and goofy things done to it, but nothing that isn't reversible. There are 4 holes in the passenger side toe board, they had installed car mirrors in the upper trim so there are 4 holes in it. The took the mirror down and put up one of those NASCAR wide angle mirrors, which I really like now, there are no blind spots from the drivers seat. They also cut the dash for a radio, because they were too lazy to put it in from underneath it looks like, so not only is it cut for a radio with knobs, but it is also bent up.

Underneath is super clean. I want to take off the roof rack and paint the roof right away and fix a spot in the drip rail. Then it will be full paint I think, I am thinking Citrus green from the 71 Camaro with a white stripe on the side. Atp said Mar-K will do custom side trim, so I think I will go that route too. I want to put in a AAW update harness since I already have it, Dakota Digital VHX gauge package DD Cruise, put some power door locks and an Advanced Keys alarm/keyless entry. I also put regular registration so I can drive it every day. It will be my other daily driver.

Last edited by notchbackgta; 02-13-2015 at 03:42 PM.
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Old 02-13-2015, 12:01 PM   #2
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Nice project. How much for the roof rack?
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Old 02-13-2015, 01:54 PM   #3
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

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If it originally had a BB in it two of the four holes in the passenger toe board may be for the big block heat shield for the original exhaust.

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Old 02-13-2015, 02:01 PM   #4
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

I don't think it is an original BB, the SPID sheet is not there because someone also put a different glove box door from a truck with CST on it, but they removed the SPID anyway. One hole is about 2" and the other three are maybe 3/4"?
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Old 02-13-2015, 02:46 PM   #5
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Nice find! Sounds like great plans for the truck.
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Old 02-13-2015, 09:25 PM   #6
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

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Originally Posted by notchbackgta View Post
I don't think it is an original BB, the SPID sheet is not there because someone also put a different glove box door from a truck with CST on it, but they removed the SPID anyway. One hole is about 2" and the other three are maybe 3/4"?

Nope, too big for the heat shield. It had two 1/4" bolts in it....

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Old 02-16-2015, 10:16 AM   #7
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Just curious....
Did that come out of NC?
I saw on CL the other day that matched that ones description.

If so, I am glad a board member scored it!

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Old 02-16-2015, 04:43 PM   #8
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Yes, It was in NC, Asheville area on CL. And it was sold by a member here
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Old 03-31-2015, 02:53 PM   #9
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

No additional pictures, but now that it is warming up and I was able to put the truck in the side yard, I should be able to get some soon.

I have put around 1,500 miles on it now, mostly on two separate trips. I drove about 600 miles this weekend to pick up an old vacuum tube radio with my friend from his grandparents house in PA and we got a load of wood from the Amish to bring back to his brothers house. The big block hardly knew there was any additional weight in the burb, but the suspension would bottom out on the suspension bumpers on the crappy back roads. I also still averaged 11mpg with the speed about 70mph the whole way. I don't think that's too bad for a 454 with a TH400 and no "overdrive" except the 3.07 rear gears.

I also bought a bunch of stuff to fix/replace since basically everything that is rubber is hard, dried and cracked. I had a friend do the rear pinion seal, since it was leaking a lot. That too was hard, dried and cracked and the new seal did the trick. It failed emissions though, my friend and uncle say it should pass the HC once I change the plugs. I am skeptical, but I have known to be wrong.
I can't wait to put the new weather stripping in as most of the windows rattle and since I took the rubber mat out and the door panels off for the speaker install, it was SUPER loud on the trip. I seriously had to wear ear plugs since I already hear ringing all the time. I also got 100 square feet of Mass Loaded Vinyl, 80 square feet of Fatmat, a lot of closed cell foam to decouple the MLV from the floor and a carpet kit from ACC with the Mass Backing. I also got 300 square feet of Thinsulate to put on the floor to insulate and it should help with reduce some of the echo inside, but I am not sure how well it will work if I go with the idea of using a cabinet grade veneer plywood.

I also got the roof rack off, and all the holes in the roof welded shut. Next will be to weld all the extra "old mirror" holes in the door, the misc holes in the floor (no idea what they are for/from) and then I can truly soundproof the interior. At the very least I hope to eliminate most of the road noise through the floor, since it will be a bit difficult to completely soundproof the doors and quarter panels since the door panels don't completely cover the door. I'll get some Fatmat on the door skin and try to hang some MLV on the inside of the door, and behind the panel.

I would like to figure out what weatherstripping I can use to stop the wind noise around the door gaps to the body too. Anyone have any ideas?
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Old 03-31-2015, 06:07 PM   #10
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Sounds like you are getting some great use out of the Burb! Regarding the door seals, I will defer to the experts here.
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Old 03-31-2015, 10:27 PM   #11
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

You need tubes for that radio i can line you up with a friend that has 15,000 tubes, yes 15,000 tubes for amps and radios. He has been collecting since the 70's. Convinced me tubes are the best, sold my solid state amps, built dynaco mark III's, Klipsch klf20's Dynaco pas3, etc. Don't regret it a bit. Sorry off topic a bit, but got excited!!!
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Old 04-01-2015, 01:32 PM   #12
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

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You need tubes for that radio i can line you up with a friend that has 15,000 tubes, yes 15,000 tubes for amps and radios. He has been collecting since the 70's. Convinced me tubes are the best, sold my solid state amps, built dynaco mark III's, Klipsch klf20's Dynaco pas3, etc. Don't regret it a bit. Sorry off topic a bit, but got excited!!!
Unfortunately, he will never do anything with it. It essentially needs to be completely rebuilt, it is made of thin layers of wood with a very fine veneer and all the layers are warped. He has a 74 Camaro that just sits in the driveway that the earth will eventually reclaim If he ever does anything I will try to keep this in mind, thanks
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Old 04-01-2015, 06:21 PM   #13
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Quote:
Originally Posted by 68c10airstream View Post
You need tubes for that radio i can line you up with a friend that has 15,000 tubes, yes 15,000 tubes for amps and radios. He has been collecting since the 70's. Convinced me tubes are the best, sold my solid state amps, built dynaco mark III's, Klipsch klf20's Dynaco pas3, etc. Don't regret it a bit. Sorry off topic a bit, but got excited!!!
You are right about that. Had me some Macintosh mono amps when I was a kid. Pushed them with a Harmon kardon Pre amp. Took a while to warm up but the neighbors liked my kind of music so all was good til mom got home. Used to put 15" woofers in 50 gallon cardboard drums and I think we were making the first BAZOOKAS! Hit like crazy.
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Old 04-04-2015, 06:28 PM   #14
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Ugh, why do people booger up cars? In addition to tons of extra, unused wires, the front seat was only held in with two bolts.

Pulled out the front seat (I pulled the rear a while ago) to start putting down proper vibration dampening and sound deadening in addition to a carpet kit. I am going to have to call the manufacturer about the carpet kit. It appears that I got two of the same side wheel hump carpets, and one of the is cut crooked, on the edge where they put the welting, so it isn't like I can re-trim and hide it. I laid out the rear carpet since it is flat, it is not as nice as I hoped it would be. It is a little short in places and a little crooked at the sides. Some of the crookedness will be hidden by the wheel hump carpets but it is a disappointing since it is the highest of the line, the Essex with the mass backing, was $600 with the shipping.

Just have to pull the LH side seal belt retractor, vacuum and then wipe off all the residue from the factory vibration dampening. Someone removed most of that already, so that made for an easy job.
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Old 04-04-2015, 06:51 PM   #15
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Too bad about the carpet. Which company supplied it? Hopefully they will make it right.
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Old 04-04-2015, 09:02 PM   #16
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

I got it from Rock Auto, the one time I had an issue they sent me a new part and I didn't have to send out the old one. It is AAC carpet though
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Old 09-29-2016, 03:08 PM   #17
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Bump for updates...
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Old 09-29-2016, 04:04 PM   #18
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Thanks for the bump. I have done a LOT to the truck since the last post. I forgot to update the thread, unfortunately I don't have many pictures to add, I just went through my phone and I don't take a lot of progress pictures. I have been daily driving the Suburban since my 92 Firebird crapped out a water pump gasket and I took the ENTIRE car apart.



I have put in an AAW classic update wiring harness, a Dakota Digital VHX cluster, GPS speedo, DD cruise control, my keyless approach alarm system, Alpine head unit and Sirius radio from my Firebird since I have lifetime subscription on that Sirius unit. I got the radio bezel from the guy on the board here, it cleaned up the opening a lot since someone hacked the opening to put a factory style radio in it, friggin moron. I may wind up putting in a double din head unit instead of replacing the dash with the non-cut one that I got with the Burb, time will tell, but I like gadgets that aren't critical.


New dash pad, carpet dash cover since the dash is really ugly. New vents

I installed my Holley TBI injection and a 40 gallon tank from (I think) an 88 Suburban with an in-tank fuel pump. I put in hard stainless fuel lines with the flexible lines braided stainless over Teflon for longevity. I punctured and fixed the radiator taking the front clip back on, DOH! All the carpet is in, but it isn't finished because I have to make the interior panels still and finish the vibration and sound treatment inside the quarter panels, I only finished one side before my car needed work, plus all the rat poop/pee in the quarters needed to be cleaned and started to smell again when I got it wet, so I need to re-visit the RH quarter with some tub and tile cleaner or something better than the Simple green. I also welded in the heater delete plate from Porterbuilt and installed my Classic Auto Air heater box. I did the weather strip on the 3rd door and the passenger side door, welded the other mirror holes in the pass door and vibration treated and rust prevention treated the inside of the door along with the "4th" door quarter area. I will have to pull the 3rd door apart again and scrape all the factory vibration treatment and then do my vibration and rust prevention treatment at a later time.
Just last night I installed an overflow for the cooling system since the radiator was low on fluid , so I think it has been puking it out here and there. I don't have a fan shroud, so it may overheat slightly in traffic, but very slowly because I don't smell coolant out the exhaust and there are no drips.
I put in a new wiper motor from New Port Engineering. I bought the delay module for it, but it will require a slight modification to the dash to install since the module is so large, so that will need to be re-visited.
I put an LED light in the back of the cab and a push switch that is opened by the tailgate, so when I open the tail gate the light comes on. I also wired in a manual switch so I can use it inside with the gate closed. I recently realized i need to put in a cut off switch, so I can turn off the light when I have the gate open for extended periods. It hasn't been a big deal
I also made my own headliner panels. I am not happy with the outcome, only because I am an overachiever. There are some places it didn't come out so well, but I only had the front panel to work with. That one came out OK, as did the rear most panel, it is mostly the middle panel that I hate, lol. Now that I am mostly done with it I learn we can buy headliner kits for the Burb, I may wind up doing that but I am going to see if I can get some of the waviness out of the spots and cover them since i already have the fabric. The "bow is an aluminum strip that I bent, so that is flat and the plastic doesn't sit right once I put the screws in place to hold it up. If I put longer screws in, that may solve the problem. You can see my vibration treatment through the panels. When I pull them back out for covering I am also going to stuff the entire cavity with Thinsulate, I bought like 100 yards of the 3/4 or 1".



A note on the AAW harness. They don't sell one specifically for the Suburban and I already had the kit that I was going to put in the truck, but since this needed it sooner I decided to use it. Everything went well, but the rear tail light harness needs more wire for the Suburban. I called AAW and got more wire and pins and I re-used all my connectors for the tail lights, they are different connectors than the truck and I wanted to have it be functionally the same as it should be. The major difference being that the reverse light on the burb is clipped onto the socket and uses a flat connector, where the truck the wire is "part of" the socket and uses a round connector.

I also have some more things to add to the Suburban when I have time. I got a set of seats from an 07 Cadillac Escalade with the heat and ventilation. I have not gotten them in because the Drivers seat is computer controlled for the memory. I recently found the wiring schematics and figured out how to make the position and lumbar controls manual. I had to get some special connector pins for the one motor controls, the other pins are just Delphi. I can post the details once I get into that. It looks like i have to take a good portion of the seat apart to get to some of the wiring. I plan on doing this as soon as I can because I hate the bench seat from these years, it hurts my ass sitting in it for long periods of time because of the seat frame.
I also have the GSI Billet handles to put on, but am waiting for their alignment washers to install in my 69, since they modeled them on the 67 door handle.
I bought some heated wipers, but that was going to be a pain to put on in the time frame I had available, so I will revisit that when I paint it most likely.
I plan on putting in power door locks with an automatic door locker module from Dakota digital, and their retained accessory module with automatic headlights/running lights. I have an inverter that I am going to install in one of the quarters and put an outlet in the panel once I make them. I also bought a 71/72 Bumper and I am mounting fog lights in the turn signal spots.

My other major project will be converting this to 4x4. I bought an 88 K30 over the summer last year for the axles and round pattern 205 transfer case. I have a C15 frame with rear leaf springs that I got with my truck bed, I plan on using that under this body, but if I find a C/K30 frame by then, I may just use that instead.

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Old 09-29-2016, 04:16 PM   #19
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Some more pictures I found.


Here is the vibration treatment on the back floor


This is a hole I was able to grind in the "C" pillar behind the 4th door window so I could pass a speaker wire down to the quarter panel. There was already a hole in the top layer of steel but not in the one under it, so I got a ball tip carbide cutter and got it up there. This was actually just a picture I took so I could see my progress of the grinding. I was able to get a plastic grommet in the hole when I was done.



Progress of the interior work last summer


Working under a tent my uncle gave me


Friggin radio hole, ugh
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Old 09-29-2016, 04:19 PM   #20
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

After I got it. Notice the truck is "Like new" My cousin worked at a used car place and grabbed a bunch of stickers and put them on the truck while I was at work. I kept that one because of "Irony". I think he had Navigation on the front, lol and $750 payments. When I called him about it he said it was $750 a month for like 72 months or something, LMAO


Covering the seat since the cover and foam are all messed up on the drivers side


Progress for the firewall smoothing plate


THere were extra holes from previous owners that needed filling


My only other "rust" spot on the entire vehicle, drivers side is similar. The windshield leaks, as does the roof because there is no seam sealer at the drip rail. I bought sealer, but have not been able to get to cleaning and preping the drip channel for sealer and the entire roof for paint. I have the expoy and paint for the roof too, stupid job and car getting in the way


The inside shot of the Porterbuilt plate

Last edited by notchbackgta; 09-29-2016 at 04:43 PM.
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Old 09-29-2016, 04:40 PM   #21
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

I also installed the Morris Custom Classic 3 point seat belts. I like them but i have to change the angle of the retractor to make it easier to pull out when putting it on.

Here is the 40 gallon fuel tank. Fit very well, I just had to move the rear cross brace that the strap is mounted on in the picture. It was like it was made to be in that spot since there were already holes for it in the bottom of the frame, I think the top too, but I don't remember now. At the front I slit a length of fuel hose to put on the front brace since the stamping faced the tank and I didn't want it to abraid the tank. Also since the parting line/height for the tank is more than stock, so I welded tow pieces of rectangle tube, I salvaged them from my old treadmill, lol. They just limit the amount that the tank can go up. I lined them up with the humps at the top of the tank. Attaching the fuel lines is a bit of a pain, I kind of have to have the tank half way installed, it's because of the stiffness of the braided lines. Also for the filler neck, I used a couple of 90 degree hose bends and a reducer since the tank filler is larger than the body side. I was able to also hook up the filler vent.


The worst part was trying to tighten the filler hose clamps since I couldn't connect the hose until it was installed in place and with the reducer and two bends there 4 hose clamps, and 2 were very hard to reach with the body in the way.

Oh, I still have roof rack I don't want, lol. It is just taking space in my bedroom. I guess I can take it apart completely to ship it if someone wanted it, lol.
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Old 09-29-2016, 07:04 PM   #22
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Here is the tailgate button switch.


From today, this is the cluster completely installed and everything working


Vibration treatment in the quarters


Has a dealer? installed 2nd tank that I took out in favor of the 40


The billet handle waiting to go on


At an Ultimate Street Car search event here in NJ


Getting the fog light setup in the bumper


Burned the bracket in a little too hot, but it's not going to come off, lol. The weld shows greatly on the front and I will have to do some grinding and put some filler over that, or put a couple of coats of epoxy and block it out



Headliner


Started on one interior panel


My best friend, lol

Last edited by notchbackgta; 09-29-2016 at 07:21 PM.
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Old 09-29-2016, 08:42 PM   #23
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

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You are making good progress. The lights look pretty slick.

It looks like you will have to weld some metal back in on the dash. I would find someone parting a truck and get the radio section out of it to patch that in....

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Old 09-29-2016, 09:03 PM   #24
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

I actually have another center section of dash I got from a junk yard for $5 that I was going to use in my truck. But if I go with the double DIN radio I will likely have to loose the ash tray anyway since I will have an A/C vent above like factory, I just haven't cut out for that yet. Welding a new piece in won't be a problem at any rate.
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Old 09-29-2016, 10:11 PM   #25
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Re: Notchbackgtas 1969 Suburban

Wow, very nice upgrades...you've been busy.

Thanks for sharing!
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