My 66 GMC start to Now

Discussion in '1960-1966' started by kieth, Dec 12, 2010.

  1. kieth

    kieth Member

    Joined:
    Sep 17, 2010
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    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    I am a newby to this whole process but have dived in with both feet head first. attached is the gallery of progress so far.

    http://kieth.smugmug.com/Trucks/66-GMC/13311086_gRF57#967555158_RNLWE


    Hope I live through this, nothing gets done fast enoung for me. When I used to build models I would not let the paint or the glue dry. Maybe as I have aged I can do better.........Kieth
     
  2. LEYLAND

    LEYLAND Member

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    Aug 2, 2006
    Messages:
    229
    Location:
    Ontario, Canada
    it looks like you have a great start, how long did it take to sandblast your frame using that small home unit?

    keep up the good work!
     
  3. kieth

    kieth Member

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    Sep 17, 2010
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    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    Remember expensive mistakes

    Too long, too much sand, on my next one I found a place that will sandblast the frame and related parts, epoxy primer them, and then paint them black for $400.00 or another that will do the same and powder coat it for $700.00....I spent more than that on this frame and then had to por15 it. Will not make that mistake again. Kieth
     
  4. kieth

    kieth Member

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    Sep 17, 2010
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    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    Daily advances

    the GMC is at the point where we make great strides everyday......
    Today we

    Installed:

    new brake lines up front

    painted the front steering parts and installed them again

    removed some of the interfering frame for the headers

    installed the headers

    installed the air bags and brackets

    installed the shocks

    installed the front wheels

    it is starting to take shape day by day.....


    http://kieth.smugmug.com/Trucks/66-GMC/13311086_gRF57#1128723713_zsmuL
     
  5. johan

    johan Member

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    Jul 22, 2008
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    Location:
    Varney Ontario
    nice job .looks great.
     
  6. kieth

    kieth Member

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    Sep 17, 2010
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    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    rear brakes, 6 to 5 lug conversion

    We ran into a few snags yesterday:

    1. Machinest called and said axles were ready but one had a bad landing on it (where the bearing runs)

    2. Went to pick new axle bearings and Napa said they only had repair bearings, being stupid I said yea great, Even a blind squirrel finds a acorn some time, the repair bearing moves the bearing to another place on the axle shaft and lets one start with fresh metal and avoid the bad spot on the axle landing.......YE HA I did something right for a change

    3. ran into another glitch though,,,,,,bought new brake drums for a 71 chevy but it does not have a slot in it for the adjuster......newer trucks had the slot in the backing plate, guess we will have to make our own slot.

    4. When you have the axles converted they must also turn the center of the hub sown so the later model brake drum will fit the hub.

    anyone have any experience with the drums with no adjustment slot ? Thanks in Advance for the help ...... Kieth

    http://kieth.smugmug.com/Trucks/66-GMC/13311086_gRF57#1130244686_ZfxoQ
     
  7. kieth

    kieth Member

    Joined:
    Sep 17, 2010
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    50
    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    6 lug to 5 lug conversion problems

    Well no one makes (that I have found) a 5 hole rear brake drum for my 66 that has a adjustment slot in the drum itself........I actually have 2 of these drums off a donor truck that have the slots but it seems NAPA, O Reilly, and Auto zone all get their drums from china and none of these have the adjustment slot in it. Now we are just going to modify the backing plate so it has an adjustment slot in it........so we do not have the problem again.

    After reinstalling the axles the drums did clear everything just fine, the rubbing was because the c clips had not been reinstalled and the axles were in too far which caused the interferance...............Kieth:eek:
     
  8. clyde65

    clyde65 Member

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    Nov 17, 2010
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    I thought the adj windows were in the backing plate, am I wrong?
     
  9. kieth

    kieth Member

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    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    on the early 66's the adjuster slots were on the drums not the backing plates.
     
  10. kieth

    kieth Member

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    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    We just took a 3/8" drill bit and drilled out the backing plate (3 holes), used a small deburr tool and made the slot in the backing plates , it took about 10 minutes on each side. Used some rubber fillers from the donor suburban to seal the slot off when not needed. It worked out fine and now no one will have trouble when they purchase brake drums. I am making a short data sheet up that will go in the glove box of my gmc which will show what we used on the project so If I ever sell it the next owner will not talk bad:mad: about me on this forum..............Kieth

     
  11. kieth

    kieth Member

    Joined:
    Sep 17, 2010
    Messages:
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    Location:
    Tulsa, Oklahoma
    Well we have made a lot of progress since the last update, here is a link to the build:


    http://kieth.smugmug.com/Trucks/66-GMC/13311086_gRF57#1198227771_6ozys

    Walnut blasted the cab, fenders, hood, bed, primed seeled, did body work on cab, hood, doors, inner grille......

    Painted all the above: installed the cab, wired it up still in process, installed front and rear glass, redid dash, installed heater, vac brake booster, tilt, curise control, lots of stuff.......... Kieth
     

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