It begins... again... '70 Ranger

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Canadian Ford Eh
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It begins... again... '70 Ranger

Post by Canadian Ford Eh »

Hey everyone.

I got a 1970 F100 SWB in December, and I have been working on it on the weekends since then. This will be my second full restoration of a pickup. Here is the progress so far. Sorry, I can't find the before pictures. It was black peeling off over yellow and white (someone did a hack paintjob)

Had some fun with the front springs. I didn't know aftermarket springs are (or sometimes are) different lengths. The guy I bought the truck from had installed them, and I was wondering why I had a 1" difference in height at the front. Stripped the truck down to the frame, hoping it was not the frame... Phew! I was glad to find this. Swapped the springs, and now it sits level.
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Frame has been blasted and epoxied (now just dust-covered)
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Mostly finished the front end bodywork... Wekcome to our "guest bedroom" :D
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Cab metalwork is all done, and the final bodywork is mostly done. Had to put that on hold for a bit to deal with other things (box).
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Got most of the box blasted, pretty solid.
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Annnnnnnnd because I had taken the cab off, this is the state of my garage... Once I finish the bodywork at the front of the box, the engine & cab will go back on, and I will have a bit more room.
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More Updates to come
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Mancar1
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Re: It begins... again... '70 Ranger

Post by Mancar1 »

Looking good. You are getting a lot done.
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mark F-100
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Re: It begins... again... '70 Ranger

Post by mark F-100 »

Looks good. Lots of work involved with a restoration project.I'm finely coming to the end of mine. Keep up the good work.
Canadian Ford Eh
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Re: It begins... again... '70 Ranger

Post by Canadian Ford Eh »

Hey

So it's been a while since I last posted; I kinda got carried away with school and other things (I know, the usual excuse for not posting, got "busy"... but I've still been working on the truck!)

So, when I left off I had just had the box blasted. This is what I was left with:

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Typical rust spots, and also the drivers side rear corner of the bed was for some reason very much gone... so out came the grinder, and a fresh sheet of 16ga... had a fun time bending that with our little Princess Auto break.
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The drivers inner wheel well was also pretty bad
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But the metal was really solid just a few inches up, so I just sliced out all the crap and spent a few minutes with a hammer to make these patches , and my dad welded them in (I didn’t grind them yet).
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I immediately ordered a nice 18” leather sand bag from Eastwood after making the curved indentation on that long patch, and man is it worth having one of those bags… makes smooth, nice metal shaping much easier!

This is really the only picture I have of what the underside of the box was like
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I had planned at first just to clean/scrape a bit and then either POR 15 or rocker guard it, but while I was pounding some dents in the floor out I realized the remaining undercoating (covering about 80% of the floor) comes off in chunks when hit, and underneath there was still the nice factory sealed metal. So, a couple hours with an air chisel and I had it cleaned off. Then I took a spot blaster, drill and a wire brush to clean out the pitted spots, primed it and painted it the same blue as my two-tone outside will have. (of course by the time I took this pic I had done some sanding or something, so everything had a nice healthy coat of dust on it, but it looks awesome when I have it wiped off)

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I know the blue won’t be very good with stones and such, so I put rocker guard in the wheel wells.
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Also ended up patching the floor where the outer supports are tacked on in each corner. The tailgate took a lot of hammering to get the flat part flat, and several patches where it had rusted through. Again, there were the few areas of swiss cheese, and then a couple inches away it was completely solid metal.

I knew I was gonna be busy for the next little while so I got my dad to lay down a couple coats of epoxy to keep away the rust, you can see my patches on the floor/inner wheel well will need a bit of attention to get them looking right. I plan on getting it Line-x’d or rhino’d, and those coatings start at 1/16” think so I think that should hide the empty pitting and any minor imperfections in the box. I didn’t try too hard because I don’t wanna be afraid to put stuff in it (my dad and have a 56 Chevy, and we made a pine bed with aluminum strips and we are too afraid to put stuff in it!)

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As you can see here, someone was mean to the drivers side of the box, the entire panel in front of the wheel well was completely out of shape (it stuck out about 2 inches compared to the other one, at the wrong angle, with a huge crease, this picture doesn’t capture it all). So my dad and I spent a day bashing, prying and sweating (sweating - in the Canadian winter!) to get it straight. It's not perfect yet, but it's almost there.
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After this point I got the truck towed to my brothers house so a) we could get our chevy out, and b) so I could focus on school and not fail because of spending too much time on the truck. But don’t worry, I did lots of blocking of the front end metal, and started experimenting with how to polish up the aluminum (and with this being the ranger, there is a TON of it!)
I’ll post the rest of what I did in a couple days when I need another study break (exams in 2 weeks – fun times)

Brian
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