




Agreed, but it was mentioned how dimple dies will dress it up....wait for it....wait for version 2,Having the battery sunken down a bit definitely keeps is less in your face when the hood is open. I like it Justin.
range-industries.com

v2.0, you know me too well. I've since sanded and repainted twice for a better finish. I considered doing a round ring with four legs instead of an 'x'.
The material is 1/8" cold roll so I think dimples would be difficult. Maybe a custom vinyl sticker.
v2 would be aluminum. I need another welder to leave a spool gun connected to. And a TIG machine. So only two more welders.
I used the Range Industries rear mounts for the lower control arms. While fab work doesn’t bother me at all, the look factor is so much better (my opinion, not fact) than anything I’ve seen fabbed.I've pushed Ø1.50"-Ø1.75" dimples into .125" steel sheet. Used the hyd press and the portapower at different times. It didn't feel like I was abusing the Temco dimple dies in doing so.
hum.......
i was under the impression that such things were lots more expensive, I guess it might be once you buy all of the CV parts?![]()
1957-1979 Ford F-100 Bolt-In Crown Victoria Front Suspension Kit
This bolt in kit is designed to mount the 2003-2011 Crown Victoria front suspension to trucks with 34” outside to outside frame rails. It does not require welding, only drilling holes. It stiffens the factory frame where the crossmember mounts and ties the Crown Victoria suspension securely to...range-industries.com
Wow! This looks awesome! Do I hey have a weld in version? I did the CV swap on my 66. I’d do it again, but I know its limitations. What you have will really out perform a factory swap any day.Justin, not sure if Mor-drop is still in business but they used to take stock beams and reforge them with 2 and 3” drops. I looked at them for a project years ago. Keeps geometry very close and still uses stock parts. The beams I’ve seen lately are built up from plate and look like garbage. I just did a cradle and arm conversation on the 66 I’m building. It’s a lot of work but allow you to run the same factory wheels
Happen to have a pic of the front suspension that would show why? I'm assuming something is in the way.My issue with any drop beam is that the tie rod has to be spaced down. Really need a drop spindle to do it right.
There is a pic a few posts up of the spacer/adapter for the tie rod. Single shear, leverage arm. Not for me.Happen to have a pic of the front suspension that would show why? I'm assuming something is in the way.
Fabricate a bolt-on steering arm that allows you to improve the Ackerman and the bump-steer?
Main market is server power supplies which is what powers data centers, AI.
No, I wouldn't either. Single shear itself has never bothered me if the parts are designed correctly, but when pushed out so that there's leverage between the force and the 'anchor' it just shouldn't be done w/o a lot engineering that a disappointing few fabricators are capable of.There is a pic a few posts up of the spacer/adapter for the tie rod. Single shear, leverage arm. Not for me.
OH! Rear steer. Had thought this truck to be new enough to be front steer.The tie rod goes through a hole in the radius arm, they have to move together at fixed spacing.

The bracket is a 1" slice of 16 ga 3" SS pipe, then cut open into a 'C' to make an adjustable clamp. I welded a nut on one side of cut, and a barrel on the other to make a clamp with a bolt. The slice is welded to another piece of steel bent in a 'J' shape to make the mounting provisions. It can clamp very tight so no need for a bottom support. It uses a single 1/4-20 bolt into a riv-nut on core support.Hey Justin nice catch can... I am a bit partial as I have the exact one on my '86!!would you elaborate on the bracket setup? IE: anything at the bottom? I am wondering if you notice alot of "wobble" with it? Mine seems to have a bit of "wobble" to it and have been wondering if I should "beef" up the bracket I made.
it works fine & do not have any spillage... but....
. Overall really liking the build!! nice job!
The battery terminals are military type. I toss the metric HW and use 'Merican bolts. Machine a pocket, but can also space with washers to achieve the offset nut.If you care to share, what connector are you using under the black rubber cover for the four cables to the positive battery terminal? Something like that would significantly sanitize the battery box on my bass boat.
Yes, these are the Mil style covers.I'm curious about that cover itself. Under it I suspect is a "military battery terminal" like the '-' post has on it.
I don't mind leaning forward to reach park or reverse but wanted to have 1,2,D within comfortable reach while driving. What did you do to make a auto floor shifter work on your '84 square body?Nice job on the shifter box 2.0 Justin. I found that no two were alike in height as each driver has a specific "comfort" level of where they want the shifter know to be for their personal preference. I for one, don't like to reach for it, but I don't want it up too high either, so I understand the picky positioning.
Also, great job on the surge tank. NHRA rule or not, I am an advocate for having a surge tank in the cooling system whether the vehicle came with one or not, I like to install them and have them part of the system.