Big Red Dog
Jr. Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2010
- Messages
- 57
Ok, so if you hit me over the head long enough eventually I get the point. DOH!
I've been kicking around a plan over the last few days. So here goes.... (sort of)
First overall thoughts... Since this will eventually be my son's truck I'm thinking mostly on-road. With that in mind I'm going to keep almost everything stock. This means rebuild the engine and tranny and stay carb.
Ok, overall I see this project as three phases.
Phase 1 - The tear down. I see this as mostly cheap with just my labor. This will take the Bronco all the way down to the frame with my intent on getting it sandblasted. I will send out the engine and tranny to have someone else rebuild for me. I will likely take care of the transfer case. Not sure what to do with the axles yet...TBD.
Phase 2 - The frame rebuild. This is all my labor replacing bushing, installing axles, engine, supports, brake/gas lines everything. I feel very good about phase 1 and 2!
Phase 3 - The bodywork. Ok this phase scares the heck out of me! In the end I going to send it out for finishing work and painting. But I need to get it "mostly" ready. So I'm thinking replacing some of the really bad parts (not patching) and having it sand blasted as well. Then replacing any additional body parts that may need it after blasting. The good news is I have expierence as a welder. You name it I can weld it! Gas (metal/braze), stick, flux-core, mig/tig, I've even used arc air systems!
So there is kind of my idea about how i'm going to move forward. As for budget. If I'm going to keep it mostly stock that should keep the costs down some. Bottom line "it is what it is" and if I run out of money the project will sit idle until I can get more. DOH! I'm hoping this will be a 2 year project and not a 10 year one!
I do have my work cut out for me! But the good news is I'm finding this VERY relaxing. I don't feel rushed like when I'm replaing the brakes on my daily driver. I wrench for a while, if I get tired I stop or if I run unto a rusted bolt I can't get free (stupid yankee bronco) I walk away and try again tomorrow. I can't believe how much I'm enjoying this! I guess what I'm saying is it doesn't feel like work. At least not yet.
I've been kicking around a plan over the last few days. So here goes.... (sort of)
First overall thoughts... Since this will eventually be my son's truck I'm thinking mostly on-road. With that in mind I'm going to keep almost everything stock. This means rebuild the engine and tranny and stay carb.
Ok, overall I see this project as three phases.
Phase 1 - The tear down. I see this as mostly cheap with just my labor. This will take the Bronco all the way down to the frame with my intent on getting it sandblasted. I will send out the engine and tranny to have someone else rebuild for me. I will likely take care of the transfer case. Not sure what to do with the axles yet...TBD.
Phase 2 - The frame rebuild. This is all my labor replacing bushing, installing axles, engine, supports, brake/gas lines everything. I feel very good about phase 1 and 2!
Phase 3 - The bodywork. Ok this phase scares the heck out of me! In the end I going to send it out for finishing work and painting. But I need to get it "mostly" ready. So I'm thinking replacing some of the really bad parts (not patching) and having it sand blasted as well. Then replacing any additional body parts that may need it after blasting. The good news is I have expierence as a welder. You name it I can weld it! Gas (metal/braze), stick, flux-core, mig/tig, I've even used arc air systems!
So there is kind of my idea about how i'm going to move forward. As for budget. If I'm going to keep it mostly stock that should keep the costs down some. Bottom line "it is what it is" and if I run out of money the project will sit idle until I can get more. DOH! I'm hoping this will be a 2 year project and not a 10 year one!
I do have my work cut out for me! But the good news is I'm finding this VERY relaxing. I don't feel rushed like when I'm replaing the brakes on my daily driver. I wrench for a while, if I get tired I stop or if I run unto a rusted bolt I can't get free (stupid yankee bronco) I walk away and try again tomorrow. I can't believe how much I'm enjoying this! I guess what I'm saying is it doesn't feel like work. At least not yet.