Love the repurposed bed frames! I use them all the time and pick them up for free! Nice work!
Phil Moderator, The Engine Shop, Interiors and Project Journals
1952 Chevrolet 3100, Three on the Tree, 4:11 torque tube Updated to: ‘59 235 w/hydraulic lifters, 12v w/alternator, HEI, PCV and Power front Disc Brakes Project Journals Stovebolt Gallery Forum
Thanks phak… keeping true to the low buck build plan.
Weighed the truck today and it came in at 3260 with nearly a full tank of gas. Sort of calculated the mileage today… she’s a little on the thirsty side at 8.9 mpg of mostly highway driving at 60-65mph
Good news is the redesigned tarp holds at highway speeds.
I have an issue with the speedo… in that it doesn’t work. Put the trans end of the cable in a drill and it spun the speedometer. So it would appear the issue is the plastic gears in the transmission. Pretty sure it’s the large gear that’s the problem and that requires removing the tail shaft.
Instead of dealing with that… I’m going to try the Jegs Mechanical Speedometer Converter with Built-in GPS. It’s supposed to arrive on Monday. https://www.jegs.com/i/JEGS/555/41800/10002/-1
Just a question, but doesn't the cable drive gear and cable still need to function to drive that device too??? If your tail shaft speedo drive gear isn't secured to the shaft and turning the cable drive gear, your signal box isn't going to provide any output to use.
Have you pulled the cable drive gear and looked at both gears to determine whats broke? Could be the driven gear that connects to the cable may have the teeth stripped and the main drive gear may be still intact.
~ Dan 1951 Chevy 3 window 3100 Follow this story in the DITY Gallery "My Grandpa Carl's Truck and How it Became Mine" 1966 Chevelle (Wife's Hot Rod) | 2013 Chevy Silverado (Current daily driver) US Army MSG Retired (1977-1998) | Com Fac Maint Lead Tech Retired (1998-2021)
The mechanical speedo cable connects between the original speedometer and the speed box. Then the “magic” speed box gets a gps speed signal from the antenna and drives the speedometer.
32snake - Thanks for setting me straight - hahaha! My brain was telling me you were using the mechanical output from the transmission to drive an electronic speedo - back you know what-wards. Sorry if I caused any confusion.
~ Dan 1951 Chevy 3 window 3100 Follow this story in the DITY Gallery "My Grandpa Carl's Truck and How it Became Mine" 1966 Chevelle (Wife's Hot Rod) | 2013 Chevy Silverado (Current daily driver) US Army MSG Retired (1977-1998) | Com Fac Maint Lead Tech Retired (1998-2021)
Are planning on Bracket Racing or do you have an actual class you want to compete in?
~ Craig 1958 Viking 4400 "The Book of Thor" Read the story in the DITY 1960 Chevrolet C10 "A Family Heirloom" Follow the story in the DITY Gallery '59 Apache 31, 327 V8 (0.030 over), Muncie M20 4 Speed, GM 10 Bolt Rear... long term project (30 years and counting)
Come Bleed or Blister, something has got to give!!! | Living life in the SLOW lane
Are planning on Bracket Racing or do you have an actual class you want to compete in?
Hey Tuts,
Running in the truck class, which is open to any power adder, 4x4, diesel, etc. Not expecting to be anywhere near competitive... just looking to have some fun with like minded folk. Will be interesting to see what the truck runs but real success will be making it there and back without major breakage
60 foot times and track times and mph would be interesting.
Well I do plan to document the experience, so hopefully I'll be able to come back with some numbers. Good, bad or otherwise. Be really happy if the truck could run in the 7.5-8.0 range in the 1/8th
Box is finished and mounted. It looks to be a perfect size for what I want to stuff it with.
Wired up the gps speedo box and it’s functioning. I do appear to have a slight compatibility issue though. The truck speedo registers when I connect a drill to it and spin it counter clockwise. The box looks to be turning the cable in a clockwise fashion.
Very nice. I need to figure out something like that for my C 10. We're planning a 2000 +/- mi trip end of May /early June. Need room for Mom's luggage plus a few tools & whatever.
1966 C-10 Short Stepside HiPo Step-by-step ~ and on-going resto build in the Project Journals
That's a good looking box, the modified cover looks great too.
~ Craig 1958 Viking 4400 "The Book of Thor" Read the story in the DITY 1960 Chevrolet C10 "A Family Heirloom" Follow the story in the DITY Gallery '59 Apache 31, 327 V8 (0.030 over), Muncie M20 4 Speed, GM 10 Bolt Rear... long term project (30 years and counting)
Come Bleed or Blister, something has got to give!!! | Living life in the SLOW lane
Going through my binder of bills/instructions and came across this disk brake info. Might be useful for anyone looking to convert to front disks.
And the current state of my speedometer.. it was too stiff for the cable to spin. Disassembled it and ran some brake clean through the cable adapter. Then went a step to far and released the tension on the spring. Sort of turned into a disaster.
There is an article in the tech section that warns against messing with the spring. Really wish I would have read that beforehand
That disc brake conversion parts break down with general application info and part numbers should be a big help if anyone else wants to try and build their own.
~ Dan 1951 Chevy 3 window 3100 Follow this story in the DITY Gallery "My Grandpa Carl's Truck and How it Became Mine" 1966 Chevelle (Wife's Hot Rod) | 2013 Chevy Silverado (Current daily driver) US Army MSG Retired (1977-1998) | Com Fac Maint Lead Tech Retired (1998-2021)
Added a steering column floor mount to finish of the lower part of the column. Did have to widen (cut) the inner collar split to get it around the column and still need to fully screw it down.
Happy with how it looks so far.
Will be adding a leather type wrap around the column from the floor to roughly 6-8 inches up the column.
It ain't Crazy if it works... I did spy a Gold Vett and a SBC in another of your pics.
~ Craig 1958 Viking 4400 "The Book of Thor" Read the story in the DITY 1960 Chevrolet C10 "A Family Heirloom" Follow the story in the DITY Gallery '59 Apache 31, 327 V8 (0.030 over), Muncie M20 4 Speed, GM 10 Bolt Rear... long term project (30 years and counting)
Come Bleed or Blister, something has got to give!!! | Living life in the SLOW lane
I used two pieces of 1" square tubing, some painter tape, a tape measure and a piece of soap stone. It took a little bit but I got it within 1/8 of an inch.
Last edited by TUTS 59; 05/04/20259:24 PM.
~ Craig 1958 Viking 4400 "The Book of Thor" Read the story in the DITY 1960 Chevrolet C10 "A Family Heirloom" Follow the story in the DITY Gallery '59 Apache 31, 327 V8 (0.030 over), Muncie M20 4 Speed, GM 10 Bolt Rear... long term project (30 years and counting)
Come Bleed or Blister, something has got to give!!! | Living life in the SLOW lane
Getting the truck ready for a 1600km trip down to Sandpoint Idaho and back through the south of BC. While swapping the street wheels over, I decided to test fit the drag wheels to see how they fit.
The drag radials look so tiny it's almost comical... they are 235/60R15 vs the normal 255/70R15 that I run on the street. I went short and narrow for a couple of reasons: hoping the narrow tire won't hook to hard and the shorter height puts the rpm where it needs to be at the end of the 1/8mile... but man do they look small on the truck
Have you played around with your launch yet? How well do the traction bars work, are they snubbed up close?
~ Craig 1958 Viking 4400 "The Book of Thor" Read the story in the DITY 1960 Chevrolet C10 "A Family Heirloom" Follow the story in the DITY Gallery '59 Apache 31, 327 V8 (0.030 over), Muncie M20 4 Speed, GM 10 Bolt Rear... long term project (30 years and counting)
Come Bleed or Blister, something has got to give!!! | Living life in the SLOW lane
Have you played around with your launch yet? How well do the traction bars work, are they snubbed up close?
I've played with loading up the convertor between 1- 2k rpm on street tires and the truck hooks up a little. No experience with the drag radials on the truck. I'm ok with spinning and losing if it keeps me from breaking parts.
Had to go out and measure the snubber distance, couldn't remember what they were set at (1 inch between snubber and spring eye)
1 inch should work, it will give you room to preload the springs.
Last edited by TUTS 59; 05/09/20257:03 PM.
~ Craig 1958 Viking 4400 "The Book of Thor" Read the story in the DITY 1960 Chevrolet C10 "A Family Heirloom" Follow the story in the DITY Gallery '59 Apache 31, 327 V8 (0.030 over), Muncie M20 4 Speed, GM 10 Bolt Rear... long term project (30 years and counting)
Come Bleed or Blister, something has got to give!!! | Living life in the SLOW lane
Heading out for another 1600km BC hot rod tour in a couple of days. Will be in sandpoint Idaho for the lost in the 50’s show and on the lookout for other bolters.
Anyway went through all the “stuff” that I’m taking for roadside repairs… it appears rather expansive when you spread it out onto the floor.
Decided to give the truck a cleaning and it may be an underpowered old farm truck… but at least it’s shiny. 😀
Under powered my .... Be safe and take plenty of pictures.
~ Craig 1958 Viking 4400 "The Book of Thor" Read the story in the DITY 1960 Chevrolet C10 "A Family Heirloom" Follow the story in the DITY Gallery '59 Apache 31, 327 V8 (0.030 over), Muncie M20 4 Speed, GM 10 Bolt Rear... long term project (30 years and counting)
Come Bleed or Blister, something has got to give!!! | Living life in the SLOW lane
Wow! I was planning my first road trip once the truck was road worthy and I was just thinking about bringing an extra set of points. Maybe I need to re-think this. 😁 I do like the storage box though.
Last edited by UtahYork; 05/13/202512:13 AM.
~ John in Utah 1946 1/2Ton w/4-speed manual transmission w/1960 235 engine Here We Go Follow in his DITY Bay
- If you think about it, it has been one year ago today!
I used to pack spare fuel pump, water pump, ignition parts, belts, hoses, and every tool under the sun when I drove my Cadillac to Florida on vacation. I never needed any of it so I paired it down to a basic tool kit and points. I still never need anything.
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)
Got back from the 2000km trip and the truck mostly survived.
Hit heavy rain and some snow in the mountain passes. Truck still leaks like there’s barely a roof in sight and lets say… I never want to experience driving it in snow again.
Had a minor oil issue that turned slightly ugly. Couldn’t find it and it mostly happens under load, 3k rpm and going uphill.
Got home and redid the fuel pump gasket, torqued the bolts to 30 ft lbs with thread sealant.
Also took the dipstick apart, retightened the fittings and added permatex aviation gasket to the npt threads/collar
Was a great experience with some great people. Highly recommend getting out and travelling with the old trucks.
Last edited by Phak1; 05/31/202512:32 PM. Reason: Typos
Once again deconstructing the truck. All the oil was going down the passenger side but upon further inspection…looks like the driver side might have been the culprit. Replacing another timing cover/crank seal. Ordered a pcv valve to attempt a reduction in crankcase pressure.
Replaced the timing cover with an OEM cover, did the seal, front oil pan gasket… buttoned it all up and added a pcv valve listed for a 69 Camaro with a 427 and still have the same mystery leak.
Also replaced the valve cover gaskets while I was there… passenger side could have been an issue as the gasket didn’t appear to be well sealed.
My drag and drive is in 3 weeks so time’s running out on the truck.
Next steps… drain the oil and replace the oil pan gasket
Might be time to attempt a 4th fix and sell or LS the stupid thing. Frustrating since it starts easy, idles great, makes plenty of power and does everything well.. outside of the oil leak.
Any chance the oil is coming out of one of the holes in the end of the heads? In the pictures the passenger side lower hole looks black whereas the rest appear to show some brightness. Doesn't seem like it would have anything to do with higher rpm, going up hill but a small leak in that area will have oil all over the place given the amount of air movement in the area.