ntsqd
Well-known member
I suspect that just the Rupture tire swap would put them on nearly equal footing. They made that big of a difference on mine anyway.
Thanks Mike. Probably temporary and didn't have to hack up the ashtray slide mechanism to mount it.I like the ash tray idea Justin. Should provide a nice clean appearance.
Yes that is correct. The spring tip can be bent to get something in between.I'm guessing the tail of the spring was originally in the notch?
I might gave that trick a try.
Never had a problem with the tubing or the compression fittings. I am very careful to have enough length in the tubing for vibration relief. I merely duplicate what has worked in my '73 Square Body since it was born as GM used that tubing and fittings for their oil pressure gauges.

justin, that is what drew me to the 1/10 scale hobby to begin with, i LOVE the realistic nature of the "scalers"! I too like to keep them looking like a real truck, that said, I never really "got into" the 1.5 versions (weird?), but I did/do like the "comp crawlers" as well... enough of the 1/10 scale let's get back on the 1:1! ... albeit a ford! ..... LOL!!! I swear one of these days I am going to get all us east siders for a GTG!! !!!






Of all the things that I can do with a lathe, single-pointing threads is by far my least favorite. I will do almost anything I can to avoid it. So, I'm not cringing. I do that too. I've known machinist's who have made special die holders just so that they can do that too. Those holders do a better job of holding and starting the die square on the work.
So, no, no cringing here. Just the opposite. Feels a bit like an AA meeting.....








![MKrBO7Ovz15Nnp-w=w715-h953-s-no-gm?authuser=0[img].jpg MKrBO7Ovz15Nnp-w=w715-h953-s-no-gm?authuser=0[img].jpg](https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/data/attachments/2156/2156831-647531778ace23ff13a21ce9a27316f0.jpg)






Thanks! The 2nd one came out better so I went back and turd polished the left side. Removed my attempt at a long shallow angle on the lower insert. I have some more 'experiments' to do...I really like how your door panels turned out!
Do you machine the whole thing from one piece? Or cut flanges and weld pieces of telescopic pipe.I make these:
I use a small bead of ultra copper around where the near flange meets the tube, but I'm not convinced that I really need to do that.
I prefer them to V-Bands because they are always clocked how I welded them together, and the bolts give me a place where I can bolt on a hanger. Upstream (near) flange is pulled up from the end of the tube 1/2"-3/4" Sealing weld is on the side not seen. Downstream flange has it's ID opened up to be a slip-fit over the expanded ID tube section. Sealing weld is on the visible corner with structural tacks on the backside between the bolts.
It used to be a process to make these, but since SendCutSend and purchasing a muffler tube expander it's not the huge time sink that it used to be. With you own cnc plasma it would be even faster.




I'm green with envy.






Thanks Scott. Otherwise known as little green condoms.
I drove the truck yesterday in the heat, the A/C did OK. It doesn't blow as much air as the 1972 system. Oil pressure doesn't go below 15 psi @ 600 RPM. Coolant temp didn't go over 190 which is middle of 'Normal' so it appears the fan clutch tweak did what I wanted. I made a few stops and the truck doesn't like to restart. I assume that the fuel boils out of the bowls. Takes a long crank to fire. Long enough to pop the main 150 A fuse so have to make some changes there. Probably just bypass the fuse for that branch and leave the fuse for the audio system.
There is a phenolic spacer under the carb already. They don't really do any good, just slow things down a bit, but same end result.Can you add a carb spacer in and see if it helps?
Have similar thoughts. E-pump and reg. but $$. Return system heats the fuel until the whole tank is starting to boil. Hard to dump heat into 125+ ambient. Fuel boils at about that temp. Same issue on my 1972 with EFI....Were I building that car now I'd do away with the mech. fuel pump and use an in-tank electric pump with a FPR to keep the supply line under pressure and a return system to keep the fuel circulating. In your part of the world I'd seriously consider routing the return fuel thru a small liquid to air cooler placed somewhere under the truck. The 5.0 Explorer's PS cooler is just about the right size (plan to use one of those that way on the Wagon). I'd make the plumbing between the FPR and the carb as short as I reasonably could. This wouldn't help with the hot re-start boiled fuel problem directly, but it would make getting fuel into the fuel bowls a lot faster as well as head-off any possible vapor lock issues in the future.