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Cheapest and best with suspension depth may be a front frame clip. Ford ltd or something simular. Especially since you might use a really heavy engine. Few vehicles look right sitting on another total frame.
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Yeah, that is probably how I will go. The studey does have IFS though so it might be possible to use that with disc brakes added and tube shocks. and anti sway bar.
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The existance of independant front suspension on your unit came as a suprise. Then again it is a truck type on a car chassis I would think.
Ford stuck with the solid front axel until 1949 I believe even on their cars. So studebaker was somewhat more progressive than at least ford. Chev went independant front suspension quite early. Perhaps 1933-34-35 on their cars. They had a special name for it that I presently forget. Knee action or whatever. It was one very hard existance to be a long haul truck driver in the early days. What they drove was well illustrated in that old movie we drive by night with Humphrey Bogart and a guy called George Raft?. . Raft usually played gangster types during the period that film was made. The roads that passed for highways where also something else. |
yeah, the independent front on the chevys was called knee action. It was very strange, so were some others. I had a 37 chevy in college but it had a solid axle.
the lower a arm on the study comes almost to the center of the car. the upper link looks like a short driveshaft with the yoke holding the top of the king pin assembly. It has rotary shocks so they would have to go I think. |
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The '64 Falcon Convertible I did some years ago was more hole than floor. The only thing that provided any structural support was the driveshaft tunnel. I cut out the floors and welded in new metal, putting the same pattern in the metal to prevent "oil canning". New inner rockers, made by a local welder of 12 ga made for a very rigid structure. |
Good stuff!
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This is my personal favorite late 30's pickup (if running fenders) This one was bought by a customer on the other side of the lake from me-and came to N Texas from Washington. I supply lots of parts to 1930's GMC guys. about 5 yrs after buying my first 37, I came across the photo of my dad when he was 15 or so in the town of Perryton 5 miles from the oklahoma-cimmaron strip/panhandle)where grandpa had moved them in 29 just in time for Home | THE DUST BOWL, as the second episode airing TONITE will explain--36 half of everyone could no longer hang in there and left, the rain didn't start again til 1938--but no way anything was back to normal. I really wonder how they got the money for this pickup in 39-it must have been one of the flashist in town -gawd they must have been prowd of it. it must have been sitting at the B O P gmc truck dealer on main street for a yr or three, they has a small produce buisness- or what was left of it- and knew the dealership owner well. http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/...d-pict0414.jpg the hawk probably did not end up on the dinner table--but the other two praire chickens im sure -did. |
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In today's sheet metal world, a MIG welder with shielding gas and a minimal amount of sheet metal bending skills will go a LONG way toward correcting a cancerous car. |
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I was planning to go on saturday /sunday to pick it up but the repairs on the dodge towing truck have not gone well so far so it will have to be next week.
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If you're up near Minneapolis drop me a message.
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Maybe we can do lunch.;)
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Though they may not be exact , replacement floors pans:
Rust Repair Panels | Auto Body Parts | Replacement Floor Pans |
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