It's coming along! Who cares about the time, if you have the space for a dormant project?
About the pig iron ballast above the axle for the Econoline: I had a '61 Econoline pick-up, and they didn't use that at first. After reports came in, about the handling instability, they decided to fit it. Mine has it. I bought it used, in about 1976, and it was in there then.
Sometime after that, I was in Detroit, visiting friends. I went to the Detroit Public Library and I asked for whatever they had on the Econoline first generation. I was provided a brochure that was distributed to the GM/Chevy sales force, and it had stills from that same group in the video shown lifting the rear of the Econoline pickup. I commented elsewhere those burly, winter-coat wearing fellows look like they were borrowed from the Detroit Lions defensive line. I still have a photocopy I made of it at the Detroit Public Library.
FYI of the readers, yes, mine had a OEM 9" rear end in it. Barely-enough to withstand the abuse the 170 cu. in inline-6 could hand-out.
One of my friends from fire-rescue liked mine so-much, he searched around Miami FL until he discovered a '65 Econoline pickup and he re-did that, nicely. I helped him with the mechanicals when he hit something he couldn't resolve, and started throwing tools.
I never owned something that got as-much attention as that so plain and minimally-powered cab-over pickup. My Smokey & the Bandit '77 Trans-Am with a 400 Pontiac might be a close second.
Here's a partial pic of it from probably late 1980's. My friend came to FL and rode that R100RT back to MI at the end of November after I sold it to him.
