Rebuilding the 54

Discussion in '1947-1954' started by Climberdad, Oct 18, 2009.

  1. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    Hello all,

    The project has begun. This weekend I got the front clip off and the engine is out. After a lot of scraping, a lot of degreaser, a lot of power washing and a lot of Gojo from head to toe - the engine, frame and engine compartment and finally myself are all clean...

    1st question. I can finally read the engine numbers: Con 4 C 314 are on the plates behind the distributor. 3835911 on the same side towards the front. From the inliners page the engine appears to be a 53-55 235. What does the Con 4 C 314 translate to?

    Here's some pics of the progress.

    Cheers!
     

    Attached Files:

  2. ol' chebby

    ol' chebby Member

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    Con 4 means it went down conveyer belt 4. The other # are date, plant and shift, etc. It should be a 235, 54 was the first year of it in a truck.
     
  3. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    Thanks for the info.

    It was my understanding, from the Previous Owner, that the engine was a 58...

    This make this a little more interesting. How do I tell if the engine "matches" the body/chassis? By matches - I mean - is it the original engine?

    Cheers!
     
  4. ol' chebby

    ol' chebby Member

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    Rarely do they match this far out. What you need to do is to decode the date out of the engine, then decode the vin of the truck. I think it is acceptable in the resto world if the #s are in 45 days of each other. No one will know but you.....so if it is not, DON'T TELL ANYONE.
     
  5. willardgreen

    willardgreen Member

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    Nice!

    Do you know how luck your are not to be faced with a bunch of rust?
    No Pelosi;)
     
  6. vwnate1

    vwnate1 Member

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    Which Engine

    Just post up a pic of the engine before you pulled it apart and we'll know what it is...
     
  7. ol' chebby

    ol' chebby Member

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    If you don't use that headboard on the front, you can ship it this way......
     
  8. Zig

    Zig Member

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    Smooth looking truck!

    As nice as yours is to start with, I'm not sure why you are blowing it apart~:confused:

    I'm sure you'll have fun with it, however. Did you get to drive it much before you started disassembling it?

    Keep the pictures coming!
     
  9. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    Does anyone have a source to decode the C 314 code? the VIN shows it's sequential number to be 26015. I'm trying to determine how close these two are in production dates.

     
  10. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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  11. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    Nate,

    I looked back and found that I took no engine pics prior to starting. I've got a ton of the disassembly - most of the linkages and some other things that were going to be confusing during the re-assembly.

    From what I can tell - this engine has not been rebuilt. The main bearings are not oversized and I can not see any markings on the tops of any of the pistons.

    We'll see soon enough. I have been talking with Evan (Coilover) and he is helping me locate some bits. He has a gentleman by the name of Jerry Willis in Princeton, TX who is a inline 6 expert. Maybe Evan will chime in on more of Jerry's background. Jerry is going to build up a long block for me that should wind to about 4500 RPM and have plenty of go to run my AC for those hot Texas summer days. I am having him build it due to his experience with those engines. I do not want something that is not streetable but I do want it to have the power to run down the highway.

    Cheers!

     
    Last edited: Oct 22, 2009
  12. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    It's funny - I am not a big fan of the grill guard. I have removed it and welded up the extra holes in the bumper. It is stored in a very secret and safe place...;) I can not part with it though - I know it is a unique piece.

    Cheers!

     
    Last edited: Oct 22, 2009
  13. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    This started almost 1 year ago. I was pulling trailer full of kids around a neighborhood for trick or treat and it just started loosing power. See: https://talk.classicparts.com/showthread.php?t=9344 I got it home and started checking things out and found that the compression was way off - especially cylinders 2 and 4. I pulled the head and found that there was some pretty good scoring in those cylinders. The truck sat for the last year while I decided what to do.

    As you stated - it is a very clean truck - all original. I can not start chopping it up. But I really want to be able to drive it more. I have this dream of taking my son, who is now 12, on a road trip starting in Oklahoma City and driving Route 66 to the pier in Cali. As the truck sits that is not feasible.

    So - using only period correct pieces and parts it will go back together and I will have a truck that can run down the road at 65-70 all day long. The brake work I have done make it stop on a dime. The suspension is still stiff - but - it is a truck... Now - some may say that I am ruining a nice truck. To them - I am sorry. I honestly do not believe I am doing anything to harm it. As for my son and the time we get to spend together - I will bank every second.

    I will keep the pictures and comentary coming - along with all of my questions to you guys.

    Here's a project I did a few years back - different mode of transportation but a similar project: http://forum.ih8mud.com/hardcore-corner/51130-hardcore-rotm-project-rascal-july-2005-a.html

    Cheers!

     
    Last edited: Oct 22, 2009
  14. Zig

    Zig Member

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    Thanks for all the info, Bruce.

    So what all did you do to the brakes?
     
  15. Bill Hanlon

    Bill Hanlon Member

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    I'm no expert on '54 Chevy trucks, but many GM casting date codes follow a 3 or 4 character code where:

    The first character is a letter. A=January, B=February ... L=December
    The last character is a number, 0 thru 9. Signifies the last character of the year.
    The one or two digits in the middle are the day of the month, 1 thru 31.

    In your case, C314 would decode to March 31, 1954.
     
  16. vwnate1

    vwnate1 Member

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    Engine

    O.K. Bruce ;

    Look at the rockerbox ~ if it's held on by 4 little perimiter screws , it's a 235/261 derivitave .

    Or , post up the raised part number casted into the left top side of the cylinder head and they guys will know what engine you have , I only know a few head casting #'s like engine in 848 or 050 .

    making it go 65 MPH is easy , just balance everything inside it to ZERO grams and away you'll go :D and it won't break .

    As long as it's apart , be sure he replaces the cam bearings as that's the primary cource of oil pressure & volume loss and these oldies need good top end oiling .

    If it's a 235 , you should really buy a brandy new 261 cam and solid lifters , from a 1962 C-50 , it'll pep the engine up nicely and won't affect idle , cold Wx operation etc. like thos silly " racing " cams do .

    FORGET about hydrauilc lifters as you want a freeway flyer and they never worked out well in these engines anyways , I've been working on them since they were new and I know . ( $$ down a rathole and it'll still clatter loudly @ hot idle and pi$$ you off)

    The tires too are *very* important ,I know you'll be wanting LT radial tires as it's a heavy rig and passenger car tires on an old truck you're driving long distance with your son in , is not only stupid , it's irresponsable . (precious cargo and all that) . they need to be TALL , I've posted the correct size before .

    I'm sure you'll have a nice rig when done but unless it's rusty there's no need to rip it all apart , my '40 is another ' survivor ' rig and has never been restored , it wheezes on down the road at post legal speeds all the time and is just fine and reliable too . this comment isnt for you Bruce , it's for others who might rip a good truck to pieces then three years later scrap it , that's the fate of 95 % of all hobby vehicles and it makes me crazy.

    The guys here have ALL the answers , they've never been stumped when I ask even the most arcane questions .

    I hope you'll consider hanging that grille gaurd on the garage/shop wall , I LOVE it .
     
  17. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    Thanks Nate,

    I will take a closer look at the head tomorrow and get the casting numbers. Thanks for all of the other engine tips - I'll pass them along. As for the tires - that was the first thing I did - I'm running LT215/85 R16 BF Goodrich Commercial TA Radials.

    As for the future - who can tell... But the plan is that this truck will be in our family for a long time;)

    Cheers!


     
    Last edited: Oct 23, 2009
  18. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    Zig

    I completely rebuilt them from the master cylinder to the brake drums and everything in between. I keep them properly adjusted. The few times I've had to rely on them they have stopped me with out issue - no pulling to either side...

    I think that drum brakes get a bad rap. If they are properly maintained and adjusted they work great!

    Cheers!

     
  19. Climberdad

    Climberdad Member

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    Thanks Bill,

    So an engine manufactured March 31, 1954 and a VIN that stated it was the 26015 Sequential number in 1954.

    What do you guys think? Possibly the original engine?

    Cheers!


     
  20. vwnate1

    vwnate1 Member

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    1954 235

    If it is , it's a mixed blessing ~ having the original engine is a HUGE plus but IIRC the '54 235 is a one year beast , hard to find parts for .

    Build it carefully and correctly and it'll outlast YOU and your kids .

    Drum brakes are O.K. but you have Bendix brakes , they actually WORK unlike Huck (rhymes with suck) brakes :rolleyes:
     

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