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Justin's retroactive build thread
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crawlercreations
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2010 9:36 pm Posts: 1101 Location: Arvada
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Tub cutting is fun. I think everyone should do it!
Hurry up and get it done already. I think it's been under the knife longer than its been driven.
_________________ There is a fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness"
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Sat Nov 28, 2015 11:23 pm |
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Digger
Official CCB Member
Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 8:53 pm Posts: 1276
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Don't you think your kids are going to fall through that hole?
_________________ Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc. Build Thread:
Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg
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Tue Dec 01, 2015 2:45 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Shhh! Don't tell them!
OK, could use some design critique. Pics of the rear setup are below. I'm making good progress. Turns out this is way easier to do the second time. Both hoop mounts are 2" .25 wall DOM. Probably overkill, but I had it spare and it only added 10lbs to the design over 1.75" .120 wall. The front mount extends the full width of the frame above the rear crossmember, tying the hoops together. It'll get some tabs welding it to the crossmember at points in the middle to increase stiffness. The current plan is to have both hoop mounts above the frame, with plates fully encircling them and running vertically down both sides of the frame. I'm hoping this will spread the twisting load on the frame enough after it's linked and coilover-ed. I may completely box in the area between the two 2" tubes with plate to improve rigidity and spread the load more evenly. The distance from the face of the frame to the back side of the hoop is about 6.5". I could inset the hoop into the cargo area, but I don't really want to lose the space if I can help it. I'm already going to lose some to the shock.
The shocks will mount below and somewhat inboard of the hoops. I'm guessing the centerline of the upper mount will be at least 1" inboard of the back of the hoop. The lower mounts will attach to the back side of the axle. I'm hoping I can get away with not having to run a cross bar behind the rear seat. I may tie the top of the shock hoop into the roll cage by using sandwich plates at the top of the wheel well. I'm hoping to get stuff tacked in in the next few days and will post pics. I _really_ don't want to screw this up, and would like to not have to modify it should the rear of the rig get linked. The goal is to be able to weld in the links, throw the springs on and wheel it.
As an aside, I'm really digging the pierced tube mounting of the shock hoops. Besides the cool appearance, it makes it ridiculously easy to tinker with the layout.
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Tue Dec 01, 2015 11:36 pm |
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hockeydad4-22
Official CCB Member
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2010 1:11 pm Posts: 2378 Location: Highlands Ranch Colorado
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Seems like your horizontal tubes will be right where the 23 gal rear fuel tank will be - if you are running one. Do those tubes run all the way across the frame to the drivers side?
_________________ [color=#BFFF40]Greg
If you are the smartest person in the room - You are in the wrong room
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Wed Dec 02, 2015 12:12 pm |
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crawlercreations
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2010 9:36 pm Posts: 1101 Location: Arvada
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Interference with the tank, as mentioned could be an issue. I am guessing you already thought that out though. I would be fine with that design once it was tied into the cage. It would probably be okay for just shocks without that tie in but there is no way I would trust it with supporting the weight of the rig on coil overs. Are you planning on isolating your cage while tying to the frame? If you are going to go solid mount then no worries tying the hoop right in but if you're isolating the cage when tying to the frame then you will need to also isolate the hoop from the cage. That will allow the hoop to flex some. Tied right into frame with the cage and you'll have a little additional noise from the hoop tie in but it should be negligible.
_________________ There is a fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness"
Last edited by crawlercreations on Wed Dec 02, 2015 1:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Wed Dec 02, 2015 1:24 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
The front one does, and goes over the crossmember so it clears the tank. The rear tube only extends to the inner edge of the frame. the plan to tie in the cage is to weld a short piece of tube to the sandwich plate with a 1.5" diameter poly bushing inside it. I'll use a couple of shock tabs off the top of the hoop to tie into the bushing. It'll give a little flex, but will also isolate noise, vibration, etc. My sense is the same as yours-not tying it in is likely fine for a shock, but a bad idea once it's carrying the full weight of the rear of the truck.
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Wed Dec 02, 2015 1:25 pm |
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Digger
Official CCB Member
Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 8:53 pm Posts: 1276
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Justin, take a look at the FEA results below.
I ran the first one with 1.75" x .120" tubing for the hoop, 2nd one is .188" for comparison. Stresses are listed in psi. Min. yield stress for 1020 stress-relieved is 50-55ksi (ksi = psi x 1000)
Some assumptions I made:
- The two 2" tubes are fully welded to the frame and the frame is rigid enough to handle the loading. Cross bracing the tube like you've shown will help it out.
- all tubes are 1020 DOM steel
- The shock tabs place the centerline of the shock roughly halfway between the tube and frame rail.
- 4Gs was the loading, assuming 800lbs/corner sprung weight. This is based on what I've seen out of my truck. My front spring buckets have already experienced 3G+ loading from hitting a smooth wash at speed. It didn't fully bottom the bumpstops, so loading could go higher. Frankly, dropping off of something hard should have go issues hitting 4Gs
Conclusion:
It could work, but .188" tubing would give you more margin. Stresses to load is roughly linear in this case, so if you want to figure stress for higher loading, just multiple.
1.75-.120_4G loading.jpg 1.75-.188_4G loading.jpg
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_________________ Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc. Build Thread:
Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg
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Thu Dec 03, 2015 1:19 pm |
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crawlercreations
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2010 9:36 pm Posts: 1101 Location: Arvada
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Looks like .188 is the only way to go. Love your capabilities Jesse!
_________________ There is a fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness"
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Thu Dec 03, 2015 1:50 pm |
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Eck
Official CCB Member
Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2012 9:33 pm Posts: 2460
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
I was gonna say the same thing but Jesse beat me to it.
_________________ 69 Wagon, 351W, Explorer EFI & Serpentine, ZF5, 35" tires, 3.5 SL, 2 BL, WARN 8274
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Thu Dec 03, 2015 3:44 pm |
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Digger
Official CCB Member
Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 8:53 pm Posts: 1276
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
_________________ Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc. Build Thread:
Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg
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Thu Dec 03, 2015 6:21 pm |
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Digger
Official CCB Member
Joined: Fri Jun 21, 2013 8:53 pm Posts: 1276
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
_________________ Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc. Build Thread:
Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg
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Thu Dec 03, 2015 6:22 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Dude, that is so ridiculously cool. THANK YOU!
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Thu Dec 03, 2015 11:16 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Scored a new heart for the Bronco for the best price: Free! Casting number is E9AE-6015-AA-11. Looks like I've got a non-roller block from 1989. Need to figure out the AA-11.
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Sat Dec 05, 2015 7:46 pm |
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akaFrankCastle
Official CCB Member
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 6:25 pm Posts: 4901 Images: 0 Location: Colorado Springs
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Justin's retroactive build thread
A would be the first generation of that particular design. AA is a later revision. Look for another set of letters and numbers, just under the part number (E9AE..) to find the actual casting date. Probably a 4 digit looking something like "2A23". Let me know what you find.
_________________ Stroppe'd 1972 Sport, 302, 3 speed with old school Duff floor shifter, T shift Dana 20 with JB Fab twin stick, 4.11 gears with Trac-loc, Lincoln hydroboost, Chevy disc conversion, WH gas lift gate shock kit, 33" Duratrac tires on slots and about 2.5" of lift, Stroppe installed: bumper braces, dual shocks on all four corners, GM power steering, trans cooler mount, auto shift column, rollbar.
The Terrible One 1972 Sport uncut, 302, C4 with 1974 column , T shift Dana 20, 3.50 gears w/ limited slip, 1966 U13 Roadster kick panel, and factory power steering.
1973 Stroppe Baja project
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Sat Dec 05, 2015 8:00 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Looks like 9K13.
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Sat Dec 05, 2015 8:12 pm |
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akaFrankCastle
Official CCB Member
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 6:25 pm Posts: 4901 Images: 0 Location: Colorado Springs
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
1989 November 13th
_________________ Stroppe'd 1972 Sport, 302, 3 speed with old school Duff floor shifter, T shift Dana 20 with JB Fab twin stick, 4.11 gears with Trac-loc, Lincoln hydroboost, Chevy disc conversion, WH gas lift gate shock kit, 33" Duratrac tires on slots and about 2.5" of lift, Stroppe installed: bumper braces, dual shocks on all four corners, GM power steering, trans cooler mount, auto shift column, rollbar.
The Terrible One 1972 Sport uncut, 302, C4 with 1974 column , T shift Dana 20, 3.50 gears w/ limited slip, 1966 U13 Roadster kick panel, and factory power steering.
1973 Stroppe Baja project
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Sat Dec 05, 2015 8:24 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Ah, cool. Thanks! Any idea what the -11 indicates?
Edit: looks like it might be the mold number.
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Sat Dec 05, 2015 8:25 pm |
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akaFrankCastle
Official CCB Member
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 6:25 pm Posts: 4901 Images: 0 Location: Colorado Springs
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
_________________ Stroppe'd 1972 Sport, 302, 3 speed with old school Duff floor shifter, T shift Dana 20 with JB Fab twin stick, 4.11 gears with Trac-loc, Lincoln hydroboost, Chevy disc conversion, WH gas lift gate shock kit, 33" Duratrac tires on slots and about 2.5" of lift, Stroppe installed: bumper braces, dual shocks on all four corners, GM power steering, trans cooler mount, auto shift column, rollbar.
The Terrible One 1972 Sport uncut, 302, C4 with 1974 column , T shift Dana 20, 3.50 gears w/ limited slip, 1966 U13 Roadster kick panel, and factory power steering.
1973 Stroppe Baja project
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Sat Dec 05, 2015 8:34 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Could well be. Doesn't appear to be loads of info about that part or on the interwebs. This things has a ridiculous amount of emissions crap hanging off it. Will be curious to see how it looks once I get the heads and pan off.
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Sat Dec 05, 2015 8:37 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Spent some time with the boy child today tearing down the engine to what you see below. Amazing how much crap was hanging off it. Lots of sludgy nastiness came out with the oil, along with at least a cup or two of water. Also drained water out of cylinders 2, 4, and 7. Between the water in the oil and the fact that I've got water in both cylinder banks, I'm thinking this engine sucked in a bunch of water and may have hydro locked. Open to opinions on that one, as I'm no engine expert. Hoping to get some more garage time tomorrow to pull the pan and heads and see what else we find. Even if this thing is trash, it'll mean some fun hours in the garage with my son and the parts for that coffee table I've been wanting to build.
Anyone know if any of the parts I pulled off this thing has any value? I'm assuming it's all scrap.
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 10:13 pm |
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crawlercreations
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2010 9:36 pm Posts: 1101 Location: Arvada
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
I'd guess the engine sat outside and ingested water that way rather than hydro locked. Possible for both scenarios but you won't know until you check the rods, possibly. If it hydro locked and it was bad enough a rod will be bent.
_________________ There is a fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness"
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 10:39 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
That's a definite possibility. The pic from craigslist had the engine outside and the pulleys are rusty. I didn't figure water could easily get in.
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 10:50 pm |
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akaFrankCastle
Official CCB Member
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 6:25 pm Posts: 4901 Images: 0 Location: Colorado Springs
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Further dissection. I'm guessing the cylinders will need to come out some to clean up the surface rust. Can you turn it over by hand?
_________________ Stroppe'd 1972 Sport, 302, 3 speed with old school Duff floor shifter, T shift Dana 20 with JB Fab twin stick, 4.11 gears with Trac-loc, Lincoln hydroboost, Chevy disc conversion, WH gas lift gate shock kit, 33" Duratrac tires on slots and about 2.5" of lift, Stroppe installed: bumper braces, dual shocks on all four corners, GM power steering, trans cooler mount, auto shift column, rollbar.
The Terrible One 1972 Sport uncut, 302, C4 with 1974 column , T shift Dana 20, 3.50 gears w/ limited slip, 1966 U13 Roadster kick panel, and factory power steering.
1973 Stroppe Baja project
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 10:54 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Nope. Breaker bar on the end of the crank pulley resulted in the bolt being broken loose. Hope to get some more garage time tomorrow to get further into it. The boy is excited about the teardown, so it might happen.
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 11:14 pm |
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Eck
Official CCB Member
Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2012 9:33 pm Posts: 2460
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
I'm just asking, but does it matter? You're planning on machining and replacing many of the the parts (cam, rods, pistons, etc.)
_________________ 69 Wagon, 351W, Explorer EFI & Serpentine, ZF5, 35" tires, 3.5 SL, 2 BL, WARN 8274
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 11:31 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Not really. I'd hoped to buy a roller block that was in good enough shape to just run, but this is more fun. The only bummer will be if the normally re-useable internals are trashed or the block is damaged. Then again, if I had to buy stuff I could rationalize a stroker....
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 11:34 pm |
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akaFrankCastle
Official CCB Member
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2010 6:25 pm Posts: 4901 Images: 0 Location: Colorado Springs
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
There's a reman 5.8 in a 96 Bronco at the UPull in COS. It's an E4 block though. Still has great paint and gaskets. Damn thing looks less than a year old.
_________________ Stroppe'd 1972 Sport, 302, 3 speed with old school Duff floor shifter, T shift Dana 20 with JB Fab twin stick, 4.11 gears with Trac-loc, Lincoln hydroboost, Chevy disc conversion, WH gas lift gate shock kit, 33" Duratrac tires on slots and about 2.5" of lift, Stroppe installed: bumper braces, dual shocks on all four corners, GM power steering, trans cooler mount, auto shift column, rollbar.
The Terrible One 1972 Sport uncut, 302, C4 with 1974 column , T shift Dana 20, 3.50 gears w/ limited slip, 1966 U13 Roadster kick panel, and factory power steering.
1973 Stroppe Baja project
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Sat Dec 12, 2015 11:57 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Got some excellent help from the household Bronco club and pulled the pan and valve covers. So far things don't look catastrophic. The rods all look straight and there's no visible piston damage. There's scuffing on the piston walls, so I'm guessing this engine has a decent number of miles on it. Any thoughts on whether the wear that can be seen is normal? Hoping to get the heads pulled in the next day or two.
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Sun Dec 13, 2015 11:10 pm |
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crawlercreations
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2010 9:36 pm Posts: 1101 Location: Arvada
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Wear looks pretty normal to me. Only thing that looks a little odd is the coloring on main cap 2. Could be the picture, could be nothing but it could be a spun bearing under there.
_________________ There is a fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness"
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Sun Dec 13, 2015 11:16 pm |
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Justin
Official CCB Member
Joined: Sun Oct 10, 2010 12:04 am Posts: 6198 Images: 0 Location: Lakewood
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Re: Justin's retroactive build thread
Just went back out and looked at it. I _think_ they're all the same, although I don't have your level of experience. It was taken under a 250w metal halide light, so shadows and color redering are a little off.
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Sun Dec 13, 2015 11:26 pm |
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