- Joined
- Apr 19, 2013
- Messages
- 393
Well, I thought I was done with the rust repair on my '67.
I was motivated by Hot August Nights classic car show this year to start work on the bronco again, I have been letting it sit for a few years while focusing on my '78 Bronco since it is a driver and I can enjoy it now,
. I looked in the opening years ago on the passenger side of the cowl and didn't see any signs of rust in the channel the top cowl panel sits on.
Dumb mistake not looking at the driver's side. Stuck a small light in there and saw some surface rust. I decided to cut open the area just above the windshield frame cowl panel to see how far the rust went. My initial plan was to only cut out that small area, clean up the underside since it is just surface rust, then weld in new metal. I figured I would just buy a new upper cowl panel, cut out the piece I need, and be good to go since the rust is minimal.
This is where I get a little confused. The panel is from Dynacorn and it is labeled as 66-77 lower cowl assembly #3734WT on the box. When I bought it, it was listed as Cowl Upper Panel 68-77. Since I have a '67 I bought the wrong panel because I wasn't paying attention. When I realized this, I started looking at the differences between the cowls and bronco years, and this led to even more confusion. ?:?
Attached are pictures of my cowl, and of the new replacement cowl. My original cowl looks like the 68-77 version, and the replacement piece is the 66-67 version.......I believe.
My bronco is an early "67, I found the original owner's manual and printed on the inside cover is the dealership who sold it as well as the company who bought it on Oct 18th, 1966. Pretty cool to find that. I will do a Marti report today and hopefully get the info back within a week. And I also found the Buck tag, it was jammed under some wiring and dirt!
I guess the cowl could have been replaced, but looking at it I see the original seam sealer on top and underneath and all of the original spot welds. I haven't found any evidence of previous metal work anywhere on the bronco.
Maybe I have the cowl styles backwards, but all of the pictures I see of 68-77's show the same style my '67 has, weird.
Since it appears I have a replacement cowl that might be correct for my year (I will wait for some confirmation), I plan on removing the entire upper cowl and just replace to get a better factory appearance for my year.
And of course that brings me to another question. When I was poking around for cowl pictures, I remembered I asked about the cowl passenger side modification for aftermarket AC. I plan on installing AC, probably the BC version. Does this mod make sense since I am rebuilding the area now? I am not sure what I would lose by getting rid of the fresh air intake. Is this one of those mods where it is no-brainer if moving to aftermarket AC?
Thanks for any help with this, seeing a lot of classic broncos and a couple of big ones at Hot August Nights this year was just the push I needed to move this project forward. If you ever have the chance to Visit Reno in August, don't miss this event!
I was motivated by Hot August Nights classic car show this year to start work on the bronco again, I have been letting it sit for a few years while focusing on my '78 Bronco since it is a driver and I can enjoy it now,
Dumb mistake not looking at the driver's side. Stuck a small light in there and saw some surface rust. I decided to cut open the area just above the windshield frame cowl panel to see how far the rust went. My initial plan was to only cut out that small area, clean up the underside since it is just surface rust, then weld in new metal. I figured I would just buy a new upper cowl panel, cut out the piece I need, and be good to go since the rust is minimal.
This is where I get a little confused. The panel is from Dynacorn and it is labeled as 66-77 lower cowl assembly #3734WT on the box. When I bought it, it was listed as Cowl Upper Panel 68-77. Since I have a '67 I bought the wrong panel because I wasn't paying attention. When I realized this, I started looking at the differences between the cowls and bronco years, and this led to even more confusion. ?:?
Attached are pictures of my cowl, and of the new replacement cowl. My original cowl looks like the 68-77 version, and the replacement piece is the 66-67 version.......I believe.
My bronco is an early "67, I found the original owner's manual and printed on the inside cover is the dealership who sold it as well as the company who bought it on Oct 18th, 1966. Pretty cool to find that. I will do a Marti report today and hopefully get the info back within a week. And I also found the Buck tag, it was jammed under some wiring and dirt!
I guess the cowl could have been replaced, but looking at it I see the original seam sealer on top and underneath and all of the original spot welds. I haven't found any evidence of previous metal work anywhere on the bronco.
Maybe I have the cowl styles backwards, but all of the pictures I see of 68-77's show the same style my '67 has, weird.
Since it appears I have a replacement cowl that might be correct for my year (I will wait for some confirmation), I plan on removing the entire upper cowl and just replace to get a better factory appearance for my year.
And of course that brings me to another question. When I was poking around for cowl pictures, I remembered I asked about the cowl passenger side modification for aftermarket AC. I plan on installing AC, probably the BC version. Does this mod make sense since I am rebuilding the area now? I am not sure what I would lose by getting rid of the fresh air intake. Is this one of those mods where it is no-brainer if moving to aftermarket AC?
Thanks for any help with this, seeing a lot of classic broncos and a couple of big ones at Hot August Nights this year was just the push I needed to move this project forward. If you ever have the chance to Visit Reno in August, don't miss this event!