Thread: One Way To Build A '32 Hyboy
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07-11-2008 06:48 AM #1
Heh, heh... I can see Don now. It'll be just like ventriloquist Jeff Dunhams puppet, Walter: "Hi, welcome to Walmart. Get your shit and get out!... Have a nice day."Jim
Racing! - Because football, basketball, baseball, and golf require only ONE BALL!
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07-11-2008 07:48 AM #2
I thought I would show what these access plates look like before I weld them in. These are larger than what I usually put in but there is so much going on in this one area I want to make sure everything is accessible without disconnecting one thing to get to another. We start with a 3/8" plate then machine off to the thickness of the existing frame material. Then slip it inside the frame and rosette weld it in and weld around that lip, so the finished access panel is flush to the existing frame . Also on the other wall of the frame that I didn't molest, I put in another 1/8" plate that looks like the other side but isn't cut out. In my opinion it is stronger in that area than we I started hacking
Ken
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07-11-2008 09:25 AM #3
Originally Posted by Ken Thurm
for the hole in my floor pan to access my master cylinder! I used rough out, to clearly state, that mine won't come close in the pretty dept.!" "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.
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07-11-2008 11:30 AM #4
That's a great way to do that Ken. Takes some time certainly, but what a difference it makes in the overall car. Gonna be a shame to upholster this one and hide all the neat touches you have put into it. For that matter, it's a shame to cover up the frame and running gear with a body!
Don
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07-17-2008 11:45 AM #5
Don & Steve,
Thanks, there a lot of advantages to putting all this stuff in the frame. Just keeping it away from all the elements and crap, besides not seeing all that stuff. Of course this is just my opinion.
I'm hijacking my own thread but I thought I would share this. I'm still thinking about the Ardun project so I ordered one of those plastic motors. I have used them before and it is really helpful when you are having to pull it out every other day. I called this guy on a Sat. night just to leave a message to ask questions about the replica he makes. It seems he just got back from Europe that night and stopped buy his shop on the way home. We start talking about his motor and he start telling me this story. He asked me what I was going to use for an intake, and I said I wasn't sure yet but would probably build fuel injection for it, something along the lines of the old Algon style, (spelling). He asked me if I watched Nascar, I said yes. He asked me if I knew who Zora Arkas Duntov was, yes, did you know he also was instrumental in working on the small block Chevy, yes, he said I'm going to send you a manifold that Nascar uses today. I said O.K.
Well the plastic motor shows up and the manifold, I bolt it together and guess what, the manifold is so close to fitting perfectly, with some small messaging it would work. I'm not going to put a 4 barrel carburetor on a V12 but the coincidence is pretty strange.
Ken
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07-17-2008 01:05 PM #6
Been wondering what you have been up to..........you haven't been around much lately. You know you are breaking the first rule of hot rod building........don't start another one till the first one is done.I thought I was the only guy who didn't adhere to that one.
That is strange about that manifold fitting on there like it does. The ports look very close and some of the bolt holes are just a little off from the pictures. But don't you have to order two of those plastic engines so you can saw them up to make your V12?
How is your Wife's healing coming?
Don
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07-17-2008 01:54 PM #7
Originally Posted by Itoldyouso
" "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.
Just in case......Happy Birthday Richard. .
Happy Birthday techinspector1