My 54 had a few cracks as well ,also on the firewall were the support from the dash rods are .No signs of collision damage on frame or fenders maybe rough roads ?
I noticed cracks in the dashboard right above the steering column-cutout.
We will need to weld this and clean it all up again, but my question is, how did it come about?
Is it fatigue from time-stress or something indicating an accident?
My cab was also in bad shape there, due to the fact that the floor and front cab supports had collapsed from rust. That put a bunch of stress on that area from the steering column which is rigidly attached to the frame. I didn't have as many cracks in the dashboard itself though.
The sheet metal support running from the firewall was badly cracked as well. That component changed from a stamping to separate rods in later trucks. Here's a pic of the end of that support where the steering column clamp bolts in during repair. Also a picture of the cab support that was installed to shore things up.
Kevin 1951 Chevy 3100 work truck Follow this saga in Project Journal Photos 1929 Ford pickup restored from the ground up. | 1929 Ford Special Coupe (First car) Busting rust since the mid-60's If you're smart enough to take it apart, you darn well better be smart enough to put it back together.
The wiper motor and gauges are out. What a miserable job for an old guy.
First the wiper (vacuum) motor, it came out pretty easy, nothing got damaged and the motor still works. I carefully opened it up. Some grease was deposited in the lowest spot and the vane got stuck on it. I removed most of it and moved the vane by hand without problem. All got assembled again and I replaced the #6 special screw with slotted head screw from the local store.
Vacuum from my 53 truck got the sweetheart moving easy.
Some pictures below.
~ NORTH OF 49TH 1948 GMC Model 9434 Frame rebuild 1953 Chevrolet 1314 1/2 ton rebuild Follow along it the DITY Bay
Instruments, what a job, but persistence finishes the race.
I just got all wires / cables and tubes since I will install all new goods anyway.
The trick will be the gauges, if possible I want to rebuild them and re-use.
How does the hand for the speedometer comes off? I don't want to bend the shaft.
The odometer must have been rebuild in 1949 (one year old truck?) and 1957. the later had the marking '88888 miles', kind of unrealistic by my thinking. Now it is sitting at 29039 miles.
Is the oil pressure and water temperature gauges usable or would they be not accurate enough?
What seals the glass to the chrome ring? Looks like old heated-up tar.
Again a few pic's.
Last edited by Biermann; 04/15/202511:52 PM. Reason: added a sentence
~ NORTH OF 49TH 1948 GMC Model 9434 Frame rebuild 1953 Chevrolet 1314 1/2 ton rebuild Follow along it the DITY Bay
As for your question about accuracy, my original gauges (temp and oil pressure) are dead on accurate. Fuel gauge gives a good approximation.
1950 Chevrolet 3100 (Ol' Roy) 1939 Packard Standard Eight Coupe (The Phantom) | 1956 Cadillac Coupe de Ville (The Bismarck) | 1956 Cadillac Sixty Special Fleetwood (The Godfather) | 1966 Oldsmobile Toronado (The Purple Knif) | 1966 Ford Mustang (Little Red) | 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 coupe | 1979 Ford F-100 | 1976 Ford F-150 (Big Red) | 1995 Ford F-150 (Newt)
The crack above the column is from yanking on the wheel to pull yourself up onto the seat… and yarding left/right with manual steering. Only way to save that is to put power steering in…and crawling up into the seat.
Chip
'Rusto-Mod' '51 Chevy 3600 5 window | C4 Corvette front/rear suspension & drivetrain | everything else looks old and stock '92 GMC Sonoma GT #15 of 806 '91 GMC Sonoma GT Extended cab 1 of 1 Trucks, Trucks.....and more Trucks
In my experience the cracks at the steering column mount to the dash is because the front body mounts and maybe also cab mounts have rusted too much and collapsed. Now the steering column is having too much stress on it because it’s bolted to the frame at the bottom and has no flex joint. It’s trying to hold the whole cab in place with normal road driving chassis flex. I suggest you examine the main cab and front sheet metal mounting points.
I bet your brake and clutch pedal holes on the floor are worn oval or elongated too. -s
2MT, no the holes for the pedals are not oval. But we all know that the steering wheel is the only 'solid' piece to hold on to when we get into getting into a truck. Also, because of the manual steering and to get the power needed the steering wheel size we have, otherwise a smaller steering wheel would be the right thing to have.
Hell, we love our four-wheel babies.
~ NORTH OF 49TH 1948 GMC Model 9434 Frame rebuild 1953 Chevrolet 1314 1/2 ton rebuild Follow along it the DITY Bay