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Delano.
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I have the trailer hooked up and am ready to pull out tomorrow morning at 4 am to go to minnesota to pick up the pickup!:P
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I made it home last night about 8 pm with minimum mishap. I will write the whole adventure later.
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Good for you Tom.
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I hope there are pictures
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Only one, but I can shoot some more.
Unfortunately the car has been completelly disassembled and only partially reassembled. The PO could not find all the parts either, like the window regulators as an example. |
Pics
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Here are pics of the truck in its present condition. It has been disassembled to a large extent, which was not apparent in the photos sent. It will be a daunting task to get it all repaired and assembled, much more than I had imagined. I believe it is still a good investment but the work needed is much more than I realized. It is truly one I should have walked away from.
Ths first pic is from my hotel room window yesterday morning. The last pic is showing where the fender was which blew away when one of the fasteners came loose. Yikes! Unfortunately I am a real sucker for a pretty face.:P I also have a powerful imagination to see what it can be instead of what it is. My original idea was to get it up and running by next summer, now I just hope I live long enough to get it to that state! |
Tom,
Its a mixed bag.... The bad side is that since you didn't take it apart, it might be more difficult to reassemble. The good side is that you see exactly what you have---no shiny paint over obvious old rust or bondo. If you have the space, and a large enough air compressor, I'd recommend using a small pressure sand blaster to remove the rust and paint---I call it "unpainting". You need to keep the pressure down, and blast at about a 45 degree angle, but the metal is thick enough that you are unlikely to distort it. Here, in Baltimore, the humidity is often so high that clean metal begins to turn brown within minutes of getting clean. And CLEAN is what sandblasting will give you. Sandblast, hit it with some pickle-ex or other treatment to preserve it until you can get primer on it. It will be one very kool-looking truck. Are you going original on the engine or going modern? |
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So from a distance it will look like a barn find but up close it will look ready to rock and roll. |
were you able to retrieve the blown away fender?
I talked to some guys this morning that had a 1959 Dodge Power Wagon --- all the body parts were in the 2nd truck. |
I didn't know when it left the truck. Drat!
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O boy. Hopefully you can find a replacement. Might me time to join the jalopy journal.
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These guys might be able to help you with needed body and interior parts.
auto body replacement parts | rust repair panels | auto body panels |
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