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Moderators: FORDification, Doug Comer
You recommended I get my rear-end trussed or reinforced.1971ford wrote: I'm not sure what you mean by "bump-formed" but any 9inch housing will work for you, you already have one even. Just put in the gears you want, if you want to change, and truss if you plan on hucking the truck and beating it hard. There isn't much to do with rearends unless you're making a trophy truck.
Yeah, found one for 400ish. Parking brake actually failed when we were working on it and almost crushed my friend but we stopped it.1971ford wrote: There are many 9 inch disk brake conversion kits out there, i dont have one but just google for some kits
sounds good. I won't be racing or pounding this truck anytime soon. The stock 9 inch should hold.1971ford wrote:You can get that housing if you want to but i wouldn't.
Not because it isn't a good housing, but because it isn't something you really need and it needs a lot of work. That housing, is just that, a bare housing. It still needs the spring perches, all brakes, axles, your 3rd member, and that housing is not trussed so it won't be much stronger than your current housing. I would hold off for a while.
sent them an email with the pics, as well as other ones I gleaned from your race dezert page. I may have to paypal you some money towards your spring project in exchange for exact measurements of your bumper.1971ford wrote: I have pictures of that bumper being made and everything, i will put them together and send you the good ones that you could use.
That garage fabber ad doesn't look too bad, i wish i could see some bigger pictures so i could look at the bends and welds. He needs to have a good bender costing about $1000 to be able to not kink tubing, not many people have them. A lot of people use the harbor freight benders, but they kink the bends.
I'll grab some measurements for you tomorrow, if i remember.Tycho wrote:sounds good. I won't be racing or pounding this truck anytime soon. The stock 9 inch should hold.1971ford wrote:You can get that housing if you want to but i wouldn't.
Not because it isn't a good housing, but because it isn't something you really need and it needs a lot of work. That housing, is just that, a bare housing. It still needs the spring perches, all brakes, axles, your 3rd member, and that housing is not trussed so it won't be much stronger than your current housing. I would hold off for a while.
sent them an email with the pics, as well as other ones I gleaned from your race dezert page. I may have to paypal you some money towards your spring project in exchange for exact measurements of your bumper.1971ford wrote: I have pictures of that bumper being made and everything, i will put them together and send you the good ones that you could use.
That garage fabber ad doesn't look too bad, i wish i could see some bigger pictures so i could look at the bends and welds. He needs to have a good bender costing about $1000 to be able to not kink tubing, not many people have them. A lot of people use the harbor freight benders, but they kink the bends.![]()
Also, you welded yours on. Is that the norm?
I noticed some guys (including Brodozer) switch to 1 ton kingpins. Any advantage?
And how does Brodozer get 20 inches of travel out of the stock suspension?
http://www.dezertrangers.com/vb/showthread.php?t=59826
Plus, one last stupid question. With the shifter (art carr/cheetah/whatever) do I have to row gears 24/7 or is their a normal D like the stock tranny? Never used one before.
Thanks for the patience
Thanks. The kit will be good, but a nice chunk of change, as well. Guess I could do the front separate from the back. Damn lack of cage is making this complicated.1971ford wrote: Your plan sounds really good.
Keeping the front simple with an autofab kit is perfect. Consider the front done besides shocks, you will want to ask John at Autofab what to do with shocks. If i remember correctly, and depending on which kit, it comes with new coil buckets and shock mounts. So you would just need new shocks that are longer, that would allow as much down/up travel as possible. You don't want to bottom out on the shock and you don't wan it to catch your wheel's weight when you are airborne (bump stops and limit straps needed).
It's a Facet gold-flo pump. Trying to mount it somewhere inside the engine bay since my fuel tank is in the cab. Thanks for the tip. Been raining here so understandably any electrical work has been impossible.1971ford wrote: Where did you mount your fuel pump? What pump is it? Holley? red/blue?
For power we just ran the ground wire to the mount and the hot wire along the frame to my switch panel. You can go to any wire under the dash that is hot when the ignition is hot though. I would run it to a switch just for kicks. You should think about swtiches too, because before you know it you will have quite a few switches to play with
http://www.amazon.com/Facet-Purolator-F ... B000BMBSQ21971ford wrote:ahh I haven't heard of those pumps.
Reason i asked where it was mounted is because most pumps (like holleys, probably yours too) are pushers not pullers. So you want them as close as possible to the tank. I'm not sure what to do about a in-cab tank though, i wouldn't want the pump inside, and anywhere outside seems to be pulling too much. hmm
I can't seem to find the suction limit for the particular model I have. It's the top of the line one they make, so who knows? I guess we will try it under the cab and see if it pumps worth a damn.1971ford wrote:well the line comes up out the top of the incab tank and then bends down and goes through the floor. anything outside of the cab will be about 2 feet away from the fuel. But i wouldn't mount it inside, so i would do it as soon as possible under the cab. No way around it really until you get a new tank, like a fuel cell in the bed.
I've been looking and yet to find this. Almost every truck I find has them mounted to shock tabs welded to the axle. If you could dig up some prefabbed plates from somewhere on the internet I'd appreciate it. Absolutely love pre-fabbed bolt on stuff.1971ford wrote: Look up pictures of leaf sprung prerunners on any forum or google or whatever, and see how they mount there shocks. Just about every one will have the lower end of the shock mounted to the U-bolt plate. You want your shocks there, not inside the frame with the stock mounts. You can weld tabs to your stock plates or buy fabbed plates.