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1969 uncut sport just purchased

sanndmann3

Bronco Guru
Joined
Jun 13, 2007
Messages
1,774
Awesome truck! Clean it and preserve it but wouldn't molest it...
but its yours, so do what you want with it. Just think things thru before acting.
 

FRANKO289

Contributor
Bronco enthusiast
Joined
Jul 7, 2008
Messages
6,807
W :eek: W .... THATS CLEAN !
mend the mechanicals, get new seat bottoms for it and leave it alone !

the money is in its originality ! I am curios about the hubcaps tho ... look like they are of a 80s van !?

some pp would pay-up to have an original survivor like that !
 

74BroncoCO

Bronco Guru
Joined
Nov 3, 2004
Messages
2,374
Anyone told you yet to leave it the way it is? :p I mean, wow she's a beauty! I'd fix the rust and do what I could to prevent any in the future. Fix what's broken/wore out and just wash it up.

If you decide to modify via bolt-on stuff, just keep all the original stuff under lock and key so that you can always put it back.
 

metal1

Full Member
Joined
May 2, 2016
Messages
259
Loc.
hidesert ,socal
when I found my 67 I had plans to do a frame up but after getting it going and really looking it over there was no need so I just did basic up grades and have put over 20 k mikes on it from Alaska to baja only let me down once with a timing sprocket ,luckily was near home base ;)
 

JGbronc

Bronco Maniac
Joined
Mar 30, 2007
Messages
6,211
That is one sweet Bronco! Like pretty much everyone else, I'd leave it alone and enjoy as is.
 

rguest3

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Bronco Guru
Joined
Dec 13, 2012
Messages
3,778
JAFHR - Nice! Here is my 69 Cordova Copper Bronco (also a Sport) that I sold about 5 years ago.

Maybe a 2 1/2" Lift and 31" tires and a little Interior TLC and call it quits.

Power Steering and Power Brakes are always great safety upgrades
 

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Teal68

Contributor
Bronco Guru
Joined
Mar 28, 2013
Messages
2,566
Loc.
Inlet Beach
First off...that's awesome! Here's what I say, Do what you want. Period!

Now, here's what I'd do since you are asking opinions. Aside from getting it mechanically sound I'd add PS, PB, disc front, and new seat upholstery. Done. Drive it!
 

rydog1130

Bronco Guru
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
4,020
Awesome man, love it! Just get the mechanicles straight and if you take anything off keep it stored in case you ever have to sell!
 
OP
OP
JAFHR

JAFHR

Jr. Member
Joined
Oct 15, 2012
Messages
62
Loc.
Bend Oregon
Thanks for all the replies. If I rebuild the seats and interior is that ok, or do I find other seats and keep mine on the side. The engine will need to be rebuilt because it is original and not set up to Non lead gas. I'm sure it's eating the valves although it does run very well. There is a lot of dirt and surface rust on the underneath axles etc along with the brake lines. Can I change that out too as a safety prevention along with power disc brakes and power steering, although it may not need the power steering. Drives pretty nice with the big ass steering wheel. My aim is to make it safe to drive with very minor mod's to it. I'm sure getting the paint buffed out is ok too, is it. Would this win any cars shows as it is since it is a true survivor. When does it become a non survivor. Ie seat covers etc.
 

DirtDonk

Contributor
Bronco Guru
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Nov 3, 2003
Messages
47,345
Are you going to sit on it for awhile then flip it? If not, you're overthinking it in my opinion.

If I rebuild the seats and interior is that ok, or do I find other seats and keep mine on the side.

Either way. The stock ones are cool, but new seats will be more comfortable for sure. The ripped up originals have maybe a tiny bit more retro-cool factor. But only a tiny amount. Extra value? I doubt it in the current market.
Whatever you do though, don't molest, or bring any harm to the floor mat.
At this time it's an irreplaceable part. Individual floor mats to protect it from your heels would be a good addition.

The engine will need to be rebuilt because it is original and not set up to Non lead gas. I'm sure it's eating the valves although it does run very well.

Well then it's not original any more and removes much of the potential survivor value of the other original parts that are still capable of being used.
And makes the thoughts of not even cleaning the underside or buffing out the paint pointless.
You could pull the engine as-is and save it, put a new one in and enjoy that one. That would give you the best of both worlds in fact.
Instead of that though, leave it alone and use the lead additive for the gas.
Some are ridiculously expensive, at a full bottle per tank. But there is one that is a multi-use dispensing bottle (Sta-Lube maybe?) that will last a long time even if you drive it daily.
That's what I used on mine until I finally had a valve job done (never did rebuild the engine other than the heads and it still ran great at 175k miles).

What makes you think yours needs that much work? Maybe it's just tired of sitting and will clean up nice with driving and some cleaning. Or is there something you already know about that needs replacement parts rather than just a little TLC?

There is a lot of dirt and surface rust on the underneath axles etc along with the brake lines. Can I change that out too as a safety prevention along with power disc brakes and power steering, although it may not need the power steering.

Again, are you flipping it or driving it? If you're going to drive it, there is no question that I would at least inspect the lines in some way, rebuild or replace the master cylinder, and replace any worn steering components.
If you don't see a lot of rust along the brake lines though, I would leave them and just flush the system for now. But do still check them extra close.
Dirt and faded metal don't harm the inside. But moisture inside does.
Change the fluid for sure. In the interest of keeping some things original when you can, you could rebuild the master cylinder rather than buy a new one.
What size tires? Presumably still the small ones, so you don't necessarily need power brakes any more than you need power steering. You just need all the regular bits to work to the best of their ability.
If there is any doubt, it's safety you're working on here. Not future value, so things like that get replaced for sure. Value be screwed, or consider that the enjoyment and safety factor ARE the value.

My aim is to make it safe to drive with very minor mod's to it. I'm sure getting the paint buffed out is ok too, is it. Would this win any cars shows as it is since it is a true survivor. When does it become a non survivor. Ie seat covers etc.

You just answered all your own questions with that statement. You're going to drive it. You're going to make minor modifications. It's already got rifle racks (but that's a good thing in my opinion), an aftermarket radio, non-original tires most likely. Maybe non original shocks? Even as good as it is, it's not really 100% original anymore right now (but maybe 98% is better than most!). So make the changes you need but don't throw away the old parts.

Therein likes the one issue many have with having to take into account the future value. A small (or big) pile of old parts that you can't get rid of, but trip over every time you turn around. Do you have space for it? Maybe a separate out-building or dark corner of the garage where nobody goes? Then you're set.
In that situation you can make all the bolt-on changes you want with impunity. Keep the old springs. Keep the old shocks (are they original?). Keep the old seats. Keep the old brakes and steering components. Keep the old everything and put all new stuff in it to give you a better driving experience.
As it sits now, most people would not end up driving it as much as they thought they would. At least not far from home. You could take it as is and bop around town all the time and still have fun, but a long trip to a show would be a lot more enjoyable with better seats, carpeted interior, better tunes, insulated top and sides and doors and floors, so that the noise and summer heat doesn't ruin the experience and piss off any spouses or kids you are taking along.

If your truck had 20k miles on it, I'd say leave it and don't even buff it out. But it's got 100k miles on the clock, dents here and there, and probably the usual changes in parts for it's typical lifespan. So I say do what needs to be done to accomplish what you want. If the most important aspect of it is value, then that's the unknown really and you should put it in a dry shed and leave it alone for a few years. Maybe down the road a mostly original one will be worth more than a restored one. But right now restored gets more money than original for most owners. Unless you have some rare example.

Whether it will win any shows as it is all depends on the show. And the people.
And the same actually still goes for resale value when it comes right down to it. As said, unless you have some spectacularly original low mileage survivor with some special provenance, the higher value Broncos are the ones that have brand new shiny paint, new interiors, new engines, maybe fuel injection, and totally spit-polished undercarriages. Not the dusty barn-find that needs to be restored. That may change, or maybe already has. But it still seems like the big bucks go to the shiny paint.

I think that the 100k miles, the few mods already, and the general age of the running bits is limiting it's value as a special-original-rare EB.
In other words... Do the things you want to enjoy it yourself.
But keep the old parts that you change out.

Paul
 

DirtDonk

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Nov 3, 2003
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When does it become a non survivor. Ie seat covers etc.

Good question. And a tough one I think.
Obviously the real survivor has nothing changed. But I think that these days the pure definition is mostly overlooked and some things are "allowed" and still call it a survivor. Like seat covers alone might not change it's status, but a rebuilt engine would in my opinion.

Buffed out paint and cleaned up undercarriage keeps it's status, but new paint and it's not really a survivor even if the old paint is still hiding there underneath.
But a little black paint on the axles is not likely going to ruin most people's day I don't think.
But there will always be some...

Paul
 

sprdv1

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REBEL
Joined
Mar 8, 2007
Messages
81,734
First off...that's awesome! Here's what I say, Do what you want. Period!

Now, here's what I'd do since you are asking opinions. Aside from getting it mechanically sound I'd add PS, PB, disc front, and new seat upholstery. Done. Drive it!

Amen... What he said
 

sprdv1

Contributor
REBEL
Joined
Mar 8, 2007
Messages
81,734
Obviously the real survivor has nothing changed.

But I think that these days the pure definition is mostly overlooked and some things are "allowed" and still call it a survivor. Like seat covers alone might not change it's status, but a rebuilt engine would in my opinion.

Yeah for sure.. close to unchanged as possible, but all in the eye of the buyer at the time...
 

surfer-b

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Bronco Guru
Joined
Sep 7, 2006
Messages
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If you don't do anything else to it, go through the brakes and steering, if these go out while driving you are SOL, be sure and replace ALL the brake lines, all else can wait if you like. I don't think the addition of PWR brakes and steering will hurt the originality of it, plus these will make it much better to drive along with new bushing kit in the front end. I would prob look around and try to find another set of seats to recover, you may run across a good deal on a set and you will still have the OE seats and covers, but that's just me. Great looking Bronco. O yeah, digging that gas pedal, if that aint 70's style nothing is. One other thing, be carful with that floormat, those parchment mats are difficult to come by in good condition
 
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