Tuesday, June 16, 2020

My 1955 Ford F-100 Pickup Truck

In 2020 I inherited my Dad's 1967 Buick Electra Convertible that I restored 26 years ago (he had it the last 20 years) and had to part with my truck to make room in June of 2020.


I sold it for $20,000, but clearly that was way to low because it sold in 2 days to a buyer in California who took it sight unseen other than this blog. I guess I should have started at $25k. 

First 4 Digits of the VIN (F10D) will tell you that's a 1/2 ton and had a 6 cylinder when it was new.
It has a 1970 Mustang 302 V-8 and a rebuilt C4 automatic (under 300 miles).
Almost a frame off Restoration, but the frame had been sealed with POR-15 or something close on the last restoration and didn't really need any work.















Truck Walk around video

Truck Virtual Test Drive


Here is the breakdown of all the restoration done:


Saturday, October 6, 2018

Replacing Windows and Channels in my 1955 Ford F-100

Here are some pictures and videos about the windows in my 55.  Much harder to replace than I expected.




Vent window gear after removal. Keep track of how it comes apart with pictures!


Getting the channel out of the door (turn it as shown)


Use a plastic pry tool to get the vent strip unstuck from the window seal


Vent window after the rebuild


Took me a while to find a ford diagram that showed how to get this back in the track.
Horrible design.  I want to replace these with something that works better in the future









Installing a floor shifter in a 1955 Ford F-100 for my 3 speed top loader

I wanted power steering, and the only way to do that was to move my 3 on the free to the floor.
This took me about 2 months of ordering the wrong parts, designing my own mounting brackets and then looking for shifter linkage on ebay that I could bend a little and fit into my layout.

I have a 1955 Ford F-100 with a 1969 Mustang 302 V8 and a 1966 Top loader 3-speed manual transmission also from a mustang.

I started with a kit for a Mustang, but the rods were too long and I couldn't change the shifter stick if it was too close to the seat, so don't do that.  Just buy a Master Shift for a 3 speed and buy the parts you need to build your own custom setup.  If I had used the Mustang kit my shifter would been under the seat.  I had to move it up and forward about 4" with my custom bracket.

Here are my pictures to get an idea of how I did it.  I had the guys at work cut it out of 1/2" aluminum plate for me on a waterjet after I designed it in AutoDesk Fusion 360.  I will get around to posting the cad model soon if anyone wants to get one cut too. I reused the mounting plate that was made for this transmission as a spacer because I needed the shifter to be about 1/2" more to the left.








I used some skinny $3 rods from Home Depot to mockup what I needed for shifter linkage and then searched ebay for linkage that was close.  They were easy to bend when I put them in a vice and slowly bent them by placing a a 4 foot iron pipe over the linkage and used that as bending leverage.


Installing the 400 Series Power Steering Conversion kit for my 1955 Ford F-100

Mid Fifty has some great information about converting your 1955 Ford F-100 over to power steering without changing our the front axle.  CPP is the company that makes the 400 series power steering gear box that works with the 1955-59 Chevy trucks & 1953-60 Ford Trucks.  Other options include the Toyota gear box retrofit, but now that CPP makes a brand new box, that is the way most people are going.
I found a kit on ebay from Bro-Speed that was much like the Mid Fifty kit, but for about the same price included the Saginaw pump, so I went that route. At the time of writing, the kit was on sale for $557.99)
The Rag Joint with the long shaft is not for an aftermarket column like the ididit, so I exchanged that for a Rag Joint like they sell on midfifty.com


Here is a video going over my removal of the column, pitman arm, and gear box



I did have a few problems and here is my run down of solutions

The triangle flange is hard to get onto the pump. I had to tap around the gear as I tightened the bolts that connect it to the gear box.

The kit from Bro-Speed came with no instructions, so I downloaded the ones from CPP that are on the Mid Fifty website.

You will need a tapered drill bit to enlarge the hole for the gear to 1.5" and those are $157 on Amazon, or you can do like me and get a cheap metric reamer (aka Step Drill bit) that does 40mm for $15-30. (You should get some drill lube too) 
The Rag Joint didn't fit the gears. (It had a flat spot on it) and I can't use the shaft with my aftermarket GM style steering wheel, so I did an exchange. This is what I sent Bro-Speed (ebay) and they sent out a replacement.


The spacers were too long.  They go between the grear box flange and the frame.  When installed, there was no room to install the nuts and the gear was not centered on the firewall hole, so I removed the spacers and used 2 thick fender washers to get a 1/4" gap and that worked great. I used a screw driver to keep a gap between the bottom of the hole and where the gear was while I tightened the bolts.





The saginaw pump had bolts on the back that were to short for the rear mounting bracket I found on ebay, so I had to use a front/back mount combo that was about $87 for my 1969 Ford Mustang 302 engine.  The lower bolt shown going into the block is 5.5" long. I found that it was 1/4 too long because of gunk build up on the end of the bolt hole, so I had to cut off the last 1/4" of the 5.5" bolt. This was suggested in the directions that came with the bracket. (Could they not find 5-1/4" bolts?)
I had to buy 5 belts before I got the right one, and that was a Duralast 15430 from AutoZone. (43")
It was a tight fit, but the 15440 would have been too close to the lower radiator hose.



I will post more later as I finish this project,  I'm waiting for the rag joint.
I will also be making a post about converting to a floor shifter.  You must go with a floor shifter if you have a 3 on the tree like me.


Tuesday, January 30, 2018

1955 Ford F100 Fiberglass Hood

Someone put a fiberglass hood on this truck a long time ago and never painted it or cut it correctly.
I looked around the internet for pictures of how this should be done and this is what I ended up doing.

The fender has to be cut so that the lower section can be bolted to the step and cab.
I cut it with a Dremel with a diamond blade.

I have a bad feeling that getting these to all line up when I'm done with all the paint and body work will be a problem.  They already don't fit up well as you can see from the gap above the tape.



This is the part I cut off and then I had to re-connect two pieces with fiberglass to make one part since the truck had part of it already cut off so they could close the hood.



1955 Ford F100 Firewall Updates and Electronic Ignition

I cleaned up the firewall on the truck, replaced some rusted out electronics and put in electronic ignition. 
If something could get screwed up, I screwed it up.  Here is how I fixed everything without having it towed to a repair shop.

My 55 Ford has a 302 out of a 68' Mustang.  It also has a Top Loader 3 on the tree manual transmission.

Painted some stuff and got the heater ready to be installed with a new motor.  The old motor was rotted out and was still 6 volt.  My new heater is 6 volt too, so I added a resistor that will bring the 12v down to 6v.

Painted this black with some shaker can Rustoleum


Some before and after pictures Had to move horn relay to make room for heater (that was not installed when I got the truck)  I can't seem to find replacement heaters anywhere.  I guess no one makes reproductions?


While installing heater hoses (remember I said it came with no heater) I pulled out the distributor without marking it!  Stupid!  Took me 4 hours to get it back into the right place.
Then the fitting leaked and I had to pull it out again a week later and this time the rod fell into the oil pan, but i could still reach it!  I took a plastic straw from a sports bottle and heated it up with boiling water and then used a screw driver that was the same diameter to stretch the straw to be the same size as the rod.  Then I taped that to a long screw driver and lowered it over the rod and had to push hard to slide the rod into the straw, then I was able to pull it up and put it back in the right place.  Then I pushed a long skinny screw driver down the straw to release the distributor rod where I needed it to be.
Now if you have screwed up the timing and its in the wrong spot (will not start or back fires) you can use a combination of a flashlight to look into spark plug hole number 1 while turning the crank to see when top dead center comes up. They should be close to your timing mark too.  Be carefull that you don't mix up top dead center before spark and the exhaust stroke.  You don't want the exhaust stroke.





The truck has a fiberglass hood.  I painted the inside with the left over bedliner paint.