Thread: One Way To Build A '32 Hyboy
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02-10-2008 04:48 PM #76
Originally Posted by Don Shillady
Thanks for the suggestion.
Ken
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02-10-2008 04:56 PM #77
Wow!!!! Hope you're going to build her a really special car, Ken!!!! Really like that shop, got to get mine cleaned up one of these days.....Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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02-11-2008 05:32 AM #78
Ken,
While my wife too is a keeper, she does stay out of the man cave . My shop is usually fairly neat, I don't have a carpet and the only reason my tool boxes are polished is that when I was final buffing some parts for my car there was some Presta splatter and car polish did a better job of clean up.Dave W
I am now gone from this forum for now - finally have pulled the plug
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02-11-2008 06:05 AM #79
You know you've made it on two levels when you can get your wife to vacuum the carpet floor in your shop. Oh yeah Ken, I bet that garage was really a MESS! You haven't seen messes til you see ours sometimes.
BTW, I love those inboard coilovers on the front. What a neat setup.
Don
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02-13-2008 06:03 PM #80
Dave-Thanks she wants a '32 Woody for her surf board
Ic2-You have a nice work area too!
Don-The only thing about a messy garage is you usually have gotten something done I'm happy with the front end also.
Ken
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02-13-2008 06:13 PM #81
We have been working on mounting the shocks and muffler and fuel pump and filters.
I decided to mount the shocks in front of the half shafts so to keep the rear view as clean looking as possible.
The second shot is that tunnel I showed in the beginning. That allows the bar to be mounted close to the bottom of the frame so nothing is hanging down. As the suspension goes threw its travel it won't hit the bottom of the frame. It will go up inside the frame.
Ken
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02-13-2008 06:21 PM #82
I had a local muffler company make me a single muffler with 3" inlets and outlets. It seems the mufflers always wind up under neath the passenger area and generate so much interior heat. Even with the good insulation that is out there. So this car I decided to use a single muffler and mount it behind the drivers compartment. Hopefully it will be easier to insulate the heat.
We made this fuel pump filter all in one deal to try and make a small package for the fuel delivery system. It's completely self contained. Inside is a 100 micron filter on the inlet side and a 10 micron on the outlet side.
Ken
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02-13-2008 06:58 PM #83
I just had to say nice cars, garage, and the work you are doing is really fine, if I had the bucks I would be inline to buy your next finished roadster. I was at the street rod nats, in Columbus in the late 80's spotted a black 32 fender less big motor, big tires, top like yours, been dreaming ever since. Now I have to go back and follow from the begining. 1992 or 1993 at the street rod nats in Columbus I missed the give away car by one number, I had 1095 but I didn't hear the other number, I thought I won the 32 full fendered roadster. When the guy asked me {where you from Lyle}? I knew something was wrong. "What's the old saying about somethings making you stronger" didn't make me stronger but I got through it until hear {1095}.
The garage is really, really nice.
P.S. Forgive me for calling your super clean shop/design studio a garage. I was looking at dream garages and should not have referred to your place as a garage. I've been in Hospital's that didn't look as clean.
ford2customLast edited by ford2custom; 02-13-2008 at 07:55 PM.
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02-13-2008 07:27 PM #84
Great looking pump and filter, Ken!!!!Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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02-14-2008 06:34 PM #85
I can't tell on my cpu but what is that fuel pump containment made of? That is a great little invention it looks like to me. I would like to have one."Sunshine, a street rod and a winding beautiful Ozarks road is truely Bliss!"
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02-15-2008 09:34 PM #86
FORD2CUSTOM-Thanks, very nice of you, I wanted a place like this to work and finally was able to build it.
Dave-Thanks, there wasn't anything out there that I could find that was easy to mount and self contained.
Brickman-When we come up with something new we make a technical drawing then have a model of it produced on a SLA machine. I'm probably saying this wrong but it's like a printer that uses plastic instead of ink. So it just keeps putting layer after layer of plastic down that matches your drawing. I think it stands for stereo lithography something . But what it doese for us is instead of whittling it out of a piece of aluminum we can have this in a matter of a few hours and test it to make sure all the clearances are correct. With this model, since it really doesn't have to be structural we can actually use it and check it's performance.
Ken
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03-13-2008 08:30 PM #87
Here is what has gotten done since the last post. I've been trying to wrap up several things at once. There has been a lot of jumping around. I am using the G.M. off road computer and wiring harness for the engine. So the computer is mounted under the dash along with the fly by wire throttle and the fuse panel. I decided to put it there just to keep the wiring harness short and use up the remaining space under the dash. Everything will be covered so when you look up under there you won't see anything, I will show you later how this will be done.
Ken
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03-13-2008 08:51 PM #88
The other thing that needs to be finished up is the seat frame and seat riser. All of this is made out of sheet metal and tubing. I have learned over the years this works out best for me to do it this way. It's very time consuming, but this way you can design the interior as you go along. The other reason I use steel for all the door panels and kick panels is that I got caught in a rain storm in Kansas once and ruined my interior because all the panels absorbed the water then warp all over the place, never again. Once all the panels are made and the seat and riser is done I have them powder coated before I give them to the upholstery shop.
Of all the good things that the Dearborn Deuce body has going for it there is one area that really is poorly done (my opinion only). There is a collapsible bar that is very intrusive to the interior. This bar is what locks the top open and against the tulip panel when it is being used. If you use there system you loose about 4" of width in the car, right where you need it the most. I have removed mine and made them a piece that is installed just when the top is up, it's a strut instead of this collapsible strut. This way it is removed and the top is folded down and completely eliminated from the interior.
Now, when I put the top up or down I just flip up the tulip panel, move the seat back forward on it's hinges and raise or lower the top. Everything is hidden and looks like a regular interior.
Ken
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03-13-2008 10:18 PM #89
Wow Ken you do beautiful work. I really enjoy your posts while you are doing this build. Real interesting how you go about solving the problems that always seem to come up.......Bob
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03-14-2008 02:12 AM #90
Nice Ken. I've missed this thread when it stated. Your going to need a bigger garage pretty soon it you keep this up. I will be down your way next month for a wedding, and still would love to see the truck in person! Steve." "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.
A "skip" = a dumpster.... but he says it's proper english??? Oh.. Okay. Most of us can see the dating site pun, "matching" with an arsonist.. But a "SKIP? How is that a box? It must all be...
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