birdman1
Well-known member
Great shop--I know why the dogs are there. They can help you wife find you in the huge space, otherwise she might be wandering around for days, looking for you.
Mike
Mike
Great shop--I know why the dogs are there. They can help you wife find you in the huge space, otherwise she might be wandering around for days, looking for you.
Mike![]()

so very happy to have the skid loader today.Just wondering MM, do you think the ****** How-To video is worth it? I have a good book on the Chevy TH350's that I've been studying. There's a lot of info in there and I think it might suffice, but I'm curious if I should invest in a video as well to make it a bit easier.thanks shopnut. watched the video last night. man I knew intuitively that there were a lot of parts in an automatic transmission but wow. I need to watch it a few more times. fortunately my Dad has rebuilt automatics before. never an AOD, but c-4's and c-6's he says we can do it so I will just have to watch closely and pay attention when I take it apart.
Very cool that you get the kids involved. I have a 7 year old nephew that loves spending time with me in the garage. I have already bought him some craftsman tools
EdAwesome garage, and awesome mustang - Love that body style.
Have to commend you, you spend quality time with your kids teaching them things they otherwise would not know, very good of you, "Dad"!
Great pictures of the family and the Ford!
Great job on a nice shop!
Just wondering MM, do you think the ****** How-To video is worth it? I have a good book on the Chevy TH350's that I've been studying. There's a lot of info in there and I think it might suffice, but I'm curious if I should invest in a video as well to make it a bit easier.
Thanks in advance for your input.

. as far as the 67 goes I am building this car as primarily a daily driver for my daughter. I am going a bit overboard on some things. I am not so good at daily driver builds I keep thinking I can make that a bit better, and boy that would look a lot cooler if I did it this way. I am really trying to keep it to where she can drive it to school. so I am just using the stock style suspension. all new parts with 620 magna coils but still just stock style so less expensive. the total control rack I consider essential for safety and handling as well as the disc brakes. right now I am re-using the stock steering column but someday I would like to swap to an ididit column. that is what I have in my 65 and I love it. but for now the stock column will do. this thing keeps escalating though. what I do not want is to get it to the point where it is "too nice to drive" I want her to drive it to high school and have the coolest car in school. but I don't want her to be afraid to drive it for fear it will get a paint chip or something. I am finding that it is hard to keep the balance in mind I keep wanting to go overboard. I haven't been a member for more than a few months so I just caught this thread and read it from start to finish. Nice build and very well written. You are right about GJ turning one into garage concious obessives lol. I've had to rethink a lot of things but I'm having a blast and it looks like you are too. I'm a diehard Bowtie guy but I have a soft spot for Mustangs as I got my driver's license in my Dad's new '65 coupe. 289 C4 (?). I guess that makes me a geezer! I've got a '66 Chevy II that's up next after I (ever) finish the garage. At least I'll be one fast geezer. BTW, I would NEVER put a Chevy in a Cobra!!


Congratulations! What a great feeling of accomplishment you must be experiencing. Your daughter is probably on Cloud 9 knowing her DAD is doing this for her on the '67 and the Jeep.
Question - When you rebuilt the transmission, did you have to be careful on the fluid fill/purging procedure? Is the hard shifting indicative of break-in, adjustment, air-lock or some other such condition?