Andy,
Looks good. All you lack is finishing up.
Dwight
And finishing up is taking place, slowly. I will be glad to be done.
Impressive stuff.
I like the angle of the car without the headlights too.
Not sure why, but has an Eliminator-esque feel to it in that pic.
I kind of thought the same thing. Should I be worried about my sanity, thinking like you?
I was thinking a strip of LED headlight under each front fender would be cool.
You are doing well
Andy
It great to see you are firmly grounded now
Thanks, Steve! With the ground installed I feel drained.
If there is a ****** shop in town, ask if they have a top hat type seal.
I think its Dorman Part # 65113 if you have to go to the parts store.
Thanks! Did not know they existed. I'm getting a great education!
Andy did you post the pictures of the gas valve you built for your blacksmith forge? I am assuming you have one firing the coal. I plan to build mine up with fire brick and do something to save myself the time using propane. Most of my jobs are to small to waste time messing with hand cranking and lighting. I could go through your thread but that would take more time than I may have left to live.
I'm a little lost here. If you're asking whether I have a gas forge, no I don't. If you're asking whether I have a gas pilot to light coal, no I don't.
It takes me three minutes from striking a match to getting a 3/8" round red hot. About the time it takes me to unwind hose, turn on the bottles, adjust the regulators, and get an oxyacetylene torch going and the work is still not hot. It takes a couple of minutes before that to clean out the tuyere, put in kindling, and cover it with coke. Coke lights easier than coal, and I use oil soaked planer chips for kindling (what I clean up oil on the floor with). The oil burns good and hot. I don't have an electric blower on my forge because you burn up a lot more coal with a powered blower. I prefer to crank the bellows, it's easier to adjust the fire temperature and not burn up the work.
Second time you heat the work the fire is bigger and it heats faster, the torch takes the same time to reheat. Even for small heating jobs I rarely use a torch. That being said to forge weld I plan to build a gas forge. It takes a deep coal fire to weld, and takes a fair amount of coal. You have to have all the oxygen consumed before the gas stream reaches the work, and then hot coke above the work. I think a gas forge would be easier to weld with and maybe a little faster.
I wish we had messed with the forge while I was there.
Looking good! Always good when no surprises come up during the first test drives.

Or at least minimal surprises.
The list is actually short, and looking good as previously stated.


Glad to see you making progress Andy. I just replaced the top hat seal on my TV cable for the 700R4 in the 64'. There is definitely different styles. The one that came with my new TCI TV cable was junk. I some OEM ones that had a metal shell impregnated in the seal. That is the kind you want to get.
Definitely check that you TV cable on the Blue car is correct. It can kill the trans in less than 10 miles if it is not setup correctly.
Here are all the links I have about setting up the TV Cable correctly.
http://700r4.com/faq/whattv.shtml
http://www.tvmadeez.com/article/
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/showthread.php?t=526152
Bret
I guess I need to look and see if the transmission came with a top hat seal. Through ignorance I would not have known what it was. It is a TCI transmission. I ordered one online before I saw your post so I'm sure it is not metal impregnated.
Thanks for the TV cable links. I'm a lucky guy. I've got 10,000 miles on it now, with some hard acceleration. I'll check the setup.
Andy: you sure made quick work of your TO DO LIST on the purple car. Wow it's driving down the road today and you did it all by yourself without a crew or any help other than a few tips from some of the members which may or may not helped. VERY WELL DONE!!
Thanks! I usually have no help and just dummy through things. With GJ there are so many competent people watching I may as well get the help. And, yes, the help is valuable.
I certainly don't blame you for having your son (or is it your son in law) pick up the purple car, but wondering how you are able to go to your meetings with the old co workers if you can't leave your lovely bride at home alone? do you have a health care person stop by regularly or maybe one of your kids on those days?
reason i'm asking with 86 year old parents and 82 year old in-laws i'm sure one day in the near future i'll have to find solutions to taking care of them as they are now living in their homes and doing fairly well so far.
more prayers sent to you and for your wife's health to improve.
It is my son, he lives 2-1/2 hours away. It's an 8 hour day to go, have a meal visit, etc. Tulsa is 45 minutes away. I am fortunate that my step daughter lives 1/8 mile down the road. She is fully competent to take care of her mother, but she is also raising three small grandchildren and her husband (my son in law with the backhoe) is in declining health. I have been to see my son in the last year but I try to limit the time I rely on my step daughter. She plans around my activities as best she can but there is a big difference between being gone four hours and eight hours. Plus, if there is an emergency, I'm not far away. If I'm towing a vehicle 140 miles away I can be unavoidably detained by a wreck on the highway, tire damage, or other unexpected event.
My wife is past the ability to live alone so my primary task is to make sure she stays safe and well. Everything else is secondary. It is unlikely you can do the same for four people who don't live adjacent to you.
When my 93 year old mom was living with us I had pretty much a full time job with just the two of them.
Thanks for the visits and comments!