Re: Restoring Rusty
4 Attachment(s)
getting the worm gear out was no picnic either, but got it out too
I think this is where we first spotted to completely busted up bearing, it was shattered Mess Level = 11.5 |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
1 Attachment(s)
couldn't get to the third flat screw this way, so realized the rag joint has to come off to fully slide it out - even the rag joint needed a puller to git off
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
1 Attachment(s)
getting there, this is the last pic for the night, but I did take the ball bearings out of that thing that sits on the warm gear, and hopefully I didn't loose none
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
... oh oh, the wife just pulled in the driveway, time to vacuum the house...
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
Disposal fee for what? The core you should have given them? Greg, this is Sanity calling. Convert to manual steering? Do you have a 24" diameter steering wheel? Or Arnold's biceps? :) I went the opposite direction on my old 69 C10. Converting to PS was more bang-for-the-buck than any mod I did on that truck, just ahead of dual exhausts. And I did it all with junkyard parts. Only downside was my then 17 year old daughter decided she liked to drive it. |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Manwel steering
The single complaint my 6'6", 300# father had about his 1981 GMC with a straight six and 3OTT (ie a light as you can get truck) was that the manual steering with the stock wheel was very high effort. I actually used to have to have the seat belt cinched down tight to keep me in the seat to turn the wheels sitting still on concrete.
I strongly beg to to reconsider. On the other hand your wife will drive the truck once in a concrete parking lot and then will never do it again. I have manual steering in the truck I'm looking at drag racing. All the DD's will / do be power, and I'm a man who likes my trucks with no frills (5 squares, exactly 1 set power doors...) |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Manual steering. I'm in big time. I've been considering it too for my old rag. I've got my reasons. Lol. It's funny to me but my truck has manual brakes. Everybody wants power brakes. Honestly I never cared for power brakes. My old 74 had power brakes and I never really cared for it. I'm a bird of a different feather.
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
I will admit that the rear has new riveted shoes, finned drums, and wheel cylinders. Even springs and most of the hardware is new. All I did to the front was replace the nearly worn-out pads with some mid-level pads from O'Reilly Auto. Someday I'll probably get loaded calipers with Wagner Thermo Quiet pads and have the rotors turned. |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
4 Attachment(s)
the latest addition to the workshop, man it feels good to be back in the game, looks right at home on that cart don't it
let there be sparks those of you familiar with the Lincoln MIG 110 volt machines may pick up that this is the 140C model, the C stands for "Can't get it from Lowe's or Home Depot" ha ha it's a step above the Retail machines and costs twice as much and weighs twice as much as well, has better guts made of metal rather than plastic, etc. also I can get the spool gun for it if and when the time comes to stick some thin aluminum together The Greg is Happy! |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
2 Attachment(s)
can anyone recommend what lubricant to use in my manual steering box, I have seen everything from CV joints grease to gear oil to a mix of the two recommended
I am really tempted to just use this multi purpose brown grease I have been storing for over 30 years, ha ha gotta find some use for it |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Factory uses heavy oil. If you don't ever see freezing temperatures you 'might' get away with grease.
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
3 Attachment(s)
so sent my old / bad oil pressure gauge back to Summit and they sent me a replacement for FREE
More Better News: the new gauge works! |
Re: Restoring Rusty
5 Attachment(s)
I waited a long time to get this, so I am super excited
The INNOVATE Wideband "dual" (pronunced for a Chebby, ha ha) Fuel Air Ratio meter gauge kit comes with two oxygen sensors so if you got a V8 or a dual exhaust setup I should say you install one of these in each exhaust pipe and you can see how both banks are doing DLG-1: Dual Lambda (Air/Fuel Ratio) Gauge (Includes: LSU 4.9 sensors) found it on eBay for only $320 bones, what a deal I may dedicate a separate thread to this tuning, diagnosing and data logging system as I hope to get pretty involved in it Note: I will be adding their digital Vacuum gauge (includes RPM gauge) ASAP as well, that should be enuff to get me started tuning properly |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
Glad it's working for you. Summit is usually pretty good about returns. They let me exchange parts I had for over a year when my car project plans changed. |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Cool beans on the gauges
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Wideband... The most expensive use once or twice tool before it gets put away.
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
I have been thinking about getting a wideband guage. I'll be watching to see how it works for you.
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
Manual steering is fine, but not a fan of the manual brakes swap. Pedal is to high for my liking and feels dead, stops just fine though. But will stay for now |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
3 Attachment(s)
Injury Report: Well had to try the new MIG welder without my welding gloves and with just some cheap ol' construction gloves from Home Depot and a spark burned my fore arm just passed the short gloves and made its way through the end of the denim Levis jack sleeve and through a long sleeve T shirt, I felt it but kept welding, cause I'm a man, that's why... had I stopped and screamed like a baby maybe I would have shook it off before it toasted my precious skin, ha ha
yeah, been to Harbor Freight and picked up their leather apron and long welder gloves kit, (sucks buying things over again that you had before but sold on Craigslist cause you is a PinHead) ha ha |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
(Nice little burn/re-education reminder for one spark !! If it landed in your ear - you'd have been much quicker) |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
A perfect A/F ratio means everything is dialed in and unless you may a weird change it should stay that way or relatively close for a long time. |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Greg excellent work man! Shout out from the Deep South!! Read the thread and will use your work as a reference for my own project . I have a couple questions for you about the different paint products you used throughout your build. I'm maintaining interested in the interior and the exterior trim. Any info is good. Thanks!
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
our carburated trucks don't have no computer so they don't adjust much as we drive them, they don't know weather its 50° F when we start them to drive to work or a 105° F they don't know if we is towin' or haulin or are alone in the truck or with 2 of our fat buddies so our trucks do need constant adjustments, I think you are focusing on the Idle circuit too much, I am thinking of the entire big picture, WOT - Wide Open Throttle, Part Throttle, cruising, but we'll get to all that, stay [ahem] tuned and I have started a separate thread for all this to get even more geekier with it for those of you who want to follow along INNOVATE DLG1 Wideband O2 Oxygen Sensor Tuning Diagnostics Logging Air Fuel Ratio etc |
Re: Restoring Rusty
2 Attachment(s)
well it was time to put on some big boy pants and weld up my exhaust cause you know what those there U joint clamps aint leak tight, I don't care how tight you turn them
that there bulge is a resonator in an attempt to take the drone out, I get a drone sound around 1000 RPM passenger side |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
5 Attachment(s)
here is a stare and compare of the still clamped up driver side and the newly welded up passenger side
Note I had the resonator right up against the muffler, not my proudest moment there but we hammered in the intermediate pipes so hard into the header extensions that at the time I did not want to take the whole thing apart in hopes of getting them separated, but when the time came to weld things up I used some BP Blaster and my 3 lbs sledge to somehow get them apart |
Re: Restoring Rusty
1 Attachment(s)
and both sides done and ready to go back on the truck
I really hope moving these resonators / baffles what ever you wanna call them further up and away from the mufflers will have some impact on the drone sound |
Re: Restoring Rusty
1 Attachment(s)
Mandatory Injury Report - MJR
honestly I have no idea how I sliced my hand there, probobly removing that exhaust and on those pesky U joints, they drew blood one last final time |
Re: Restoring Rusty
Quote:
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
If you do t want drone scrap those junk ass blowmasters.
|
Re: Restoring Rusty
1 Attachment(s)
some day I will own three or four of these (AVE style, please check him out on YouTube - he is so funny) and swappin attachments will be a thing of the past
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:19 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2022 67-72chevytrucks.com