I changed my mind......again

Post progress reports on your project truck(s)

Moderator: FORDification

Post Reply
Steve302
New Member
New Member
Posts: 114
Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 8:42 pm
Location: northern Cali

I changed my mind......again

Post by Steve302 »

Hello everyone,
I live in northern Cali and as many know we got thrashed by the high winds and heavy rain.
Yesterday about 5am i rushed to my shup concerned that some of the cars parked outside would be crushed by a tree or two, i was lucky no branches or other debris had touched the vehicles yet. I n a big hurry i started moving cars to the other side of the shop to get away from the trees, but the bad part was it required me to drive behind the building which had evolved into a huge mud pit overnight.
I crossed my fingers and buzzed a little Geo tracker through, then a monte carlo, my toyota minitruck, and then my 70 F-100.
Well.................What a joke!
If you had read my post as a new member you would know that i bought this truck to make it 4wd, but everyone talked me out of it because it was way too clean to chop up, so after buying everything to make it 4wd i then started trading off the 4wd stuff to get nice 2wd stuff, (c6 trans, 4 wheel disks, 28 spline posi, dropped front beams etc.....) Well after my terrible experience with this truck as a 2wd i am now back to the chopping block and ready to start cutting, 4wd here i come!!!!!!
I have never had such a bad experience with a vehicle as i did with this one over something so simple, i mean my toyota is less than 3" off the ground with darn near slicks on it and it even got through the mess.
All the poor little f-100 did was slide around and made a bunch of noise.
(I think it hates mopars because it kept trying to hit a GTX i had parked about 50 feet from where i should have been, but the front end seemed to continue sliding uphill somehow and head twards the GTX.
Honsestly i love these trucks as 2wd and 4wd and this was my push to make a final decision.
Steve
User avatar
1971ford
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 5565
Joined: Wed Jul 04, 2007 1:05 pm
Location: Placerville CA

Post by 1971ford »

That weather was horrible. my pvc garage was destroyed. My dad, brother and I drove around town just looking at the mess. i guess you know its windy when your car gets blown sideways a little.
we also found a huge metal shed laying next to a road. and quite a few shelters on their side and ripped up. when we were coming home a branch fell from a tree right onto the windsheild. it was really loud and we cant beleive the windsheild is in one peice.

i have always wanted to convert a bump to 4wd, but my dad keeps telling me we dont have the room or the equipment. i dont see how we dont have the equipment, and we could make room :D

can you please show us the whole conversion in the projects forum? that would be awsome :D
-Ryan
User avatar
flyboy2610
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 4901
Joined: Sun Oct 03, 2004 6:42 pm
Location: Nebraska, Lincoln

Post by flyboy2610 »

1971ford wrote:
i have always wanted to convert a bump to 4wd, but my dad keeps telling me we dont have the room or the equipment. i dont see how we dont have the equipment, and we could make room :D

can you please show us the whole conversion in the projects forum? that would be awsome :D
The eaiest way would be to buy a '67-72 4X4 that has a trashed body, and swap your good sheetmetal onto that frame. Seriously.
Converting a 2WD to a 4X4 is a LOT of work. For starters, you have to completely redo the steering.
"If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy."
Red Green

If you're going to live like there's no hell...............
you'd better be right.
http://theworldasiseeit-flyboy2610.blog ... ee-it.html
User avatar
1971ford
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 5565
Joined: Wed Jul 04, 2007 1:05 pm
Location: Placerville CA

Post by 1971ford »

^ i know that. i guess "Converted" isnt the best word. if i ever swapped to 4x4 i would either get a trashed 4x4 like what you said, or a 4x4 frame. i wouldnt ever try to attempt coverting a 2wd to 4x4 without frame interchange.
should of made myself clear :)
-Ryan
User avatar
71Ford100
Preferred User
Preferred User
Posts: 281
Joined: Sat Oct 02, 2004 6:03 pm
Location: Wyoming, Burns

re: I changed my mind......again

Post by 71Ford100 »

I'm looking at buying a rolled '71 250 4x4 frame and would consider parting with it after I took what I need.
Lance Peters
'72 250 4x4 project,''71 F-100 daily driver,69 F-250 4x4 Crew, '68 F-100, '68 F-250 crew under restoration, '52 Dodge 1/2 ton overload, gazillion tractors and combines
Steve302
New Member
New Member
Posts: 114
Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 8:42 pm
Location: northern Cali

re: I changed my mind......again

Post by Steve302 »

Hello,
Converting to 4wd is not that big of an issue. We have converted several ford trucks to 4wd using 73-79 style suspension axles, steering etc....
Once we know a customers needs or wants, we pre order the lift, steering parts, wheels, tires etc. the entire conversion takes about 16-26 hours depending on the fab-work required, drivelines are done last. Still far quicker than a properly done body swap.
Steve
User avatar
rjewkes
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 3711
Joined: Sun Apr 17, 2005 1:09 am
Location: Missouri, Webb City
Contact:

Post by rjewkes »

what do you do with the frame?

I thought the frames are different gauges.
"It is better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than to open it and remove all doubt." - Mark Twain
'70 f250 4x4 Crew cab 460/C6 '72 F100 390/C6 9.8 MPG AVG. '89 Mercury Cougar LS Dual Exh. V6 . 18.9 MPG AVG. In Town.
Image
I don't want to give em a heart-attack. That is what would happen if I answered the door in the buff. Heck it almost scares me to death when I step out of the shower and look in the mirror.~Mancar1~
fuelly.com
Steve302
New Member
New Member
Posts: 114
Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 8:42 pm
Location: northern Cali

re: I changed my mind......again

Post by Steve302 »

Im not sure what you mean by "what do you do with the frame?"
You simply add spring mounts in the front for the coils, mounts for the radius arms and a mount for the panhard bar. redrill the frame and add some bracing for the steering box and better than half the work is now done, well at least the hard work, you will actually get to see the truck standing on its new tires. The rear lifts easy like any other truck, i like to add my own fabbed rear perches to hold the later 73-79 ford style springs.
Steve
User avatar
1971ford
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 5565
Joined: Wed Jul 04, 2007 1:05 pm
Location: Placerville CA

re: I changed my mind......again

Post by 1971ford »

:eek: definetly keep us posted with the whole conversion!
-Ryan
User avatar
1971ford
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 5565
Joined: Wed Jul 04, 2007 1:05 pm
Location: Placerville CA

Post by 1971ford »

norcal huh? how much would it cost me to have my 69 4x4ified :evil:
-Ryan
User avatar
basketcase0302
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 6805
Joined: Thu Jan 26, 2006 7:11 am
Location: Hawthorne, Florida

re: I changed my mind......again

Post by basketcase0302 »

Steve,
There are those on the site that will say you're crazy, (yet I'm not one of them). :lol:
You simply add spring mounts in the front for the coils,
:yt: Right here is where most would falter. Instead of taking advantage of Fords superior riding front coils...
Most try to keep the front leafs, (which makes for a lot harder steering geometry, ride comfort and lift IMO).

Please keep us posted with pictures and updates!

Basketcase
Jeff
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 22&t=46251
SOLD-71 F-350 dually flatbed, 302 / .030 over V-8 with a "baby"C-6, B & M truckshifter, Dana70/4.11 ratio, intermittent wipers, tilt steering, full LED lighting on the flat bed, and no stereo yet (this way I can hear the rattles to diagnose)! SOLD!
Many Ford bumps / one 76' EB / and several dents through the years.
A lot of "oddball" Ford parts collected from working on them for 34 years now!
2008 Ford Escape 4 x 4
User avatar
69F110
Blue Oval Guru
Blue Oval Guru
Posts: 1024
Joined: Mon Jul 19, 2004 1:07 pm
Location: Bunkie, Louisiana
Contact:

Post by 69F110 »

I agree... please do keep us posted. I am intrigued.
Steve Davis
Pastor and U.S. Army Retired

1969 F100 Ranger LWB, 390 and 3 on the tree
User avatar
rjewkes
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 3711
Joined: Sun Apr 17, 2005 1:09 am
Location: Missouri, Webb City
Contact:

Post by rjewkes »

What i meant was the whole frame is thicker on a 4x4 verses the 4x2. Atleast as far as the half tons are concerned.
"It is better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than to open it and remove all doubt." - Mark Twain
'70 f250 4x4 Crew cab 460/C6 '72 F100 390/C6 9.8 MPG AVG. '89 Mercury Cougar LS Dual Exh. V6 . 18.9 MPG AVG. In Town.
Image
I don't want to give em a heart-attack. That is what would happen if I answered the door in the buff. Heck it almost scares me to death when I step out of the shower and look in the mirror.~Mancar1~
fuelly.com
Steve302
New Member
New Member
Posts: 114
Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 8:42 pm
Location: northern Cali

re: I changed my mind......again

Post by Steve302 »

hello again,
Yes some may think im crazy for putting in the time and labor to do a 4x4 conversion, but like anything else, if you do it all the time.......
Example....... Ranchero50 makes those beautiful dome lenses, (thanks i love mine) , but it would take me 3 weeks to make one of those and i would surely have to smash something in my house halfway through the process to keep my sanity.
When we do 4x4 conversions every truck is different even if its the same year and everything, simply because they are built to the customers specs. I have a 59 ford truck here right now that came in as a tubbed street rod, and halfway throught the bodywork he wanted to go 4x4. This is a bit extreme considering the running gear was allready done. When this change came about we located a 79 ford 150?or f100? i dont remember now, but anyways....... we used the entire front of the frame of the 79 so the customer could use all factory ford parts on the front end and the frame is much stronger too.
Steve
User avatar
Supermike
Blue Oval Fanatic
Blue Oval Fanatic
Posts: 955
Joined: Fri Jan 26, 2007 12:17 pm
Location: Indiana

Post by Supermike »

Steve... I bet (wonder if) all those others are front wheel drive... next time, try turning the 'ol truck around and backing through it.

That used to happen to me with my little Ranger I had on the farm. When it was slick, my grandma could get up the hill in her little front-wheel-drive Cavalier wagon, but I couldn't get up the hill in my truck. Then I learned just to turn around and back up it! No more rear wheels slipping trying to push the weight of the engine. It would zip right up!

Good luck on your conversion... take lots of pix!
Former owner of a '67 F100 Camper Special
Current owner of a 2022 Ford Bronco Wildtrak
Post Reply