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[an error occurred while processing this directive] [an error occurred while processing this directive] [an error occurred while processing this directive] | 15 May 2012 # 2962
1957 Chevy 3600 3/4-Ton"Maybellene"
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From Matt : Meet Maybellene. She is a 1957 Chevy 3600 3/4-ton pickup. This old truck's life began when a gentleman ordered her in 1957 when he retired. When she was brand new, he mounted a camper in her bed so that he could see the country with her. She made trips from North Carolina to Yellowstone, Yosemite, Grand Canyon and Washington. She stayed parked in his barn when they were not out on a camping expedition. When her owner died in 1985, his family traded her for a new Pontiac. The dealer kept her in his storage shed and never transferred the title. So we technically became the second owners when we bought her in the early spring of 2010. Some areas needed more love than others. We refurbished or rebuilt whatever we could to avoid replacement. We painstakingly reconditioned the original Brewster Green paint. We left as much original paint as possible and blended in repairs. On some areas where the original paint was too thin to buff, we shot clear over the original paint to preserve it before color sanding and buffing. Any missing parts such as the hubcaps, jack assembly or the Amity-GM spotlight have been replaced. The electrical system was restored to a generator. The seat is the original material. The headliner is original as is about half of the interior paint. All glass is original except the driver’s door because I cracked it when trying to retrieve it after it had slipped off the window regulator and fell inside the door. We varnished the Southern yellow pine bed instead of repainting the wood Brewster Green. (The beds came from the factory either painted black or painted the body color, depending on the assembly plant.) We added the fog lights. (What a find! Amity-Chevrolet fog lights off a 1941 sedan that I found in AZ!) The fog lights were converted to 12 volts and wired into the headlight switch to operate with the running lights, so no additional switches were added to the dash. The side boards for the bed were made out of Southern yellow pine to match the wood in the bed. The angle iron that I used to mount the mud flaps on the rear and the fog lights on the front were installed through original holes in the frame, so no additional holes were drilled. We added the rear view mirror (not necessary when the camper was on the back). We added seatbelts -- these are the only item that is not period correct. And one important part -- THANK YOU to everyone at Stovebolt for all of your submissions. The input, advice, tech tips and pictures have been invaluable along the way. I have never attempted a project like this before and I would not have been able to do it myself without all of your help. Thanks to Stovebolt, I was able to do everything on Maybellene by myself with the exception of getting the rims bead blasted and powder coated. This would not have been possible without all of your help. Thank you, Matt
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