What did you do to your non-G Body project today [2024 edition]

Supercharged111

Comic Book Super Hero
Oct 25, 2019
4,970
7,783
113
Colorado Springs, CO
Finished cleaning my frame yesterday and painted it in prep of the plow frame that fought me way more than it should have.

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Luckily those bottom pieces are just pinned in there and come out easily. Driving it like that all summer would suck. I have 3 holes per side to drill to add the rest of the fasteners but it's in there and everything is lining up now.
 
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Built6spdMCSS

Geezer
Jun 15, 2012
5,839
9,771
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Florida Beach
Did the new shocks fix your issue? I did this twice in 3 months. It would work OK for a couple weeks then act up again. Mine cracked a ceramic wall tile the second time and that was it for me.
I didn't put in new shocks, put them safety pins in as a friction piece to control movement. So far it's working perfectly.
 
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Built6spdMCSS

Geezer
Jun 15, 2012
5,839
9,771
113
Florida Beach
I got into my truck earlier, it was a nice day so I wanted something to do outside. My goal was to add a manual control to run a high idle when I wanted the truck to warm up quicker when it's cold outside. Couldn't tune it in with HP Tuners on a button so manual control it was.

Scrounged the buckets full of random in the garage for everything needed. Threaded 1/4-20 rod, hardware, piece of cable, the pull start handle, piece of aluminum for a retaining bracket and a piece of plastic as a bushing worm clamped to one of the dash supports. It's tight in place there and the friction holds the throttle body open, cable attached to the gas pedal and doesn't interfere at all with driving. I wanted something that would flex when normally driving. I'll fine tune it to the point of how much resistance it needs to hold the throttle body open, at the moment its tight but it works.

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mclellan83

Comic Book Super Hero
Jun 27, 2017
4,330
9,690
113
Pgh, PA
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86LK

Royal Smart Person
Jul 23, 2018
2,015
2,081
113
Finished cleaning my frame yesterday and painted it in prep of the plow frame that fought me way more than it should have.

View attachment 235996

Luckily those bottom pieces are just pinned in there and come out easily. Driving it like that all summer would suck. I have 3 holes per side to drill to add the rest of the fasteners but it's in there and everything is lining up now.
is that your wintertime poopysuit in the upper left corner in the pic there?
 

Bonnewagon

Lost in the Labyrinth
Supporting Member
Sep 18, 2009
10,596
14,361
113
Queens, NY
I stopped in to get an inspection at my friend's shop. He had just dragged in a 1957 Chevy. A mutual friend had it for around 30 years. He had a shop put a Chevy crate engine in, T-350 trans, added front disc brakes, Mallory Uni-Lite ignition, electric fuel pump, but otherwise pretty stock. The guy had let it sit for like 10 years without running it. He had no wrenching skills and was tired of just looking at it, so he sold it to my shop friend. They changed the oil, spark plugs, bought a new Holley 600 cfm carb, but it ran like crap. He asked me to look at it, and right away I saw that it was 'idling' at 2000 rpm just to stay running. They had just taken the carb out of the box, plopped it on, started it, and stood there staring at it. No one knows what a carburetor is anymore. Right off, I saw the float level was so high it was flooding. All the vacuum hoses were placed wrong so I identified each and put them straight. I hooked up a vacuum gauge and an rpm/timing light. I slowly lowered the rpm's, adjusted the idle screws, all the while watching the vacuum gauge. I got it from 2000 rpm, 10" vacuum, down to 650 rpm, and 20" of rock solid vacuum. It was so strong I hooked the vacuum advance to ported vacuum, and it responded nicely. I don't know what cam came with a GM Targetmaster crate engine, but it ended up with a super smooth idle, so not a crazy grind. Even in gear it idles nice. Now they don't have to push it in and out of the shop anymore. He wants to clean it up and sell it for a nice profit. I said when was the last time you saw someone driving one of these? Never? You have a nice, solid, driver here that you don't have to anguish over and be afraid to take it out. We'll see what he does with it.
 
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CopperNick

Comic Book Super Hero
Supporting Member
Feb 20, 2018
3,409
3,079
113
Canada
Bonnewagon, obvious your friend with the shop is likely to be more computer literate when it comes to cars than experienced with eye and ear ball tuning like someone such as Jack Roush practiced.

If your friend is so anxious to lose the ride, make him an offer he can't refuse (Now where have i heard that line before??????) All you would likely need to do is to give it a good bath and a fluff and buff and then pay visit to the nearest or next show and shine with a for sale sign in the window and you're away to the races. Might be a good cash generator for you for $$$$ to throw at one of your other projects here.]


Just noodling the situation here.


Nick
 
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MrSony

Geezer
Nov 15, 2014
6,846
6,781
113
Des Moines, Iowa
fiddled with the taillight wiring. its crunchy, every bump makes the light go out, probably what burned up the previous replacement's boards. probably just gonna get new pigtails.
 

Bonnewagon

Lost in the Labyrinth
Supporting Member
Sep 18, 2009
10,596
14,361
113
Queens, NY
Nick, not my cup of tea. I hate 50's cars. They look cool, but ride like crap. You need to pour tons of money into them just to catch up to late 60's early 70's handling. Engine upgrade is mandatory. In my salad days, I had a 1959 Ranchero, hi-po 289, three speed manual trans. What a POS. It wasn't even old and it was falling apart. Endless headaches.
 
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