The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
- Steve Simmons
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The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
(Split off from this thread)
Ok, photo time. As some of you witnessed today, the V8 made it home safely. The wife and I spent several hours cleaning it up and removing years of dirt buildup. Most exciting is that I was able to buff the nasty oxidized black paint off of one section of the hood, to reveal sort of shiny green paint underneath. I will continue over the next week or two, hopefully getting the rest of the black off. It looks like someone did a back yard paint job at some point with a can of black spray paint.
I was also able to attach the hood and realign the front end body panels to a pretty decent fit, and install the front bumper. All of the extra parts have been moved to the garage for protection and the engine is covered with a heavy towel. I will get something into the bores to protect it as soon as possible.
The immediate plan, meaning this week, will be:
- Replace both side windows
- Install rear window
- Rebuild both doors, and replace all weather seals
- Rotate engine and evaluate its condition
The plan for the next month or so will be:
- Drop and rebuild front end
- Service steering as necessary
- Flush transmission
- Drop and rebuild rear axle
- Rebuild brakes
- Try to make the engine run!
Ambitious? Absolutely.
And now for the photos. The third shot is so Jimmy will stop bugging me to post a photo of my new hat / torn upholstery cover. The last photo shows the green paint revealed after about 30-45 minutes of buffing. Only 150 hours to go before the rest of the truck is green.
Ok, photo time. As some of you witnessed today, the V8 made it home safely. The wife and I spent several hours cleaning it up and removing years of dirt buildup. Most exciting is that I was able to buff the nasty oxidized black paint off of one section of the hood, to reveal sort of shiny green paint underneath. I will continue over the next week or two, hopefully getting the rest of the black off. It looks like someone did a back yard paint job at some point with a can of black spray paint.
I was also able to attach the hood and realign the front end body panels to a pretty decent fit, and install the front bumper. All of the extra parts have been moved to the garage for protection and the engine is covered with a heavy towel. I will get something into the bores to protect it as soon as possible.
The immediate plan, meaning this week, will be:
- Replace both side windows
- Install rear window
- Rebuild both doors, and replace all weather seals
- Rotate engine and evaluate its condition
The plan for the next month or so will be:
- Drop and rebuild front end
- Service steering as necessary
- Flush transmission
- Drop and rebuild rear axle
- Rebuild brakes
- Try to make the engine run!
Ambitious? Absolutely.
And now for the photos. The third shot is so Jimmy will stop bugging me to post a photo of my new hat / torn upholstery cover. The last photo shows the green paint revealed after about 30-45 minutes of buffing. Only 150 hours to go before the rest of the truck is green.
- Steve Simmons
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
And don't forget my fan club...
- gorms68
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Wow that looks great! Are you planning on repainting the truck after how good if buffs out? Or is that just a trick of the camera. With that long list of yours i hope you don't have to waste too much time at work.
Any plans to attend the Big Three Swap Meet in San Diego to look for stuff for the new truck? I'll be there, never know what you'll find.
Any plans to attend the Big Three Swap Meet in San Diego to look for stuff for the new truck? I'll be there, never know what you'll find.
Chris Gorman
- Steve Simmons
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1969 MGC GTS - Location: Co-Nay-Ho Valley
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Buffing it out is an attempt to postpone painting for a while. The black will have to come off anyway before even a cheap paint job can be applied, because it's cheap paint that was not applied well. The green appears to be professionally applied. I think the original color was light gray, because I found some beautiful, smooth, shiny paint in that color underneath a hood hinge. I've found no trace of it anywhere else so far, so I assume the truck was sanded down when it was painted green at some point. It will definitely need to be painted for a couple reasons - because there are rust patches and because the wife wants it painted.
- gorms68
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Well at least you are not stuck trying to preserve the original paint. This makes it easy to decide. Are you planning to keep both truck? Kinda his and hers?
Chris Gorman
- Scott Pettit
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Puleeze keep the grill that lovely color combo.
By the way, my wife told me to stop bringing home cars. What drugs do you use on your wife, and where can I buy some?
By the way, my wife told me to stop bringing home cars. What drugs do you use on your wife, and where can I buy some?
Scott Pettit
scottpettit@sbcglobal.net
scottpettit@sbcglobal.net
- Steve Simmons
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
We will almost certainly have to sell something to make room for the V8, but deciding which one is an impossible task.
The same drugs that make you think orange, green and black is a good color for the grill.Scott Pettit wrote:Puleeze keep the grill that lovely color combo. By the way, my wife told me to stop bringing home cars. What drugs do you use on your wife, and where can I buy some?
- gorms68
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Wow. What an improvement. Just returning air to the tires and bolting on the loose body panels quadrupled the value. After missing out on $1.50 Ford stock this has to be the best Ford investment of the year - Sorry I couldn't help load. I trust the trailer/angle was not a problem, or did you pull it to the right and load it on the flat of the circle drive.
- Steve Simmons
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1969 MGC GTS - Location: Co-Nay-Ho Valley
- Contact:
Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Don't laugh, we've actually considered that. My wife has this crazy idea that she can drive the '39 every day. Maybe I'm crazy but I actually talked her out of it.gorms68 wrote:I guess it's time for the Beamer to hit the road
Actually I ended up calling a flatbed instead. It was money well spent. Getting that thing out of there with a pickup and trailer would have taken all day.HealeyBN7 wrote:I trust the trailer/angle was not a problem, or did you pull it to the right and load it on the flat of the circle drive.
- gorms68
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- Steve Simmons
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1969 MGC GTS - Location: Co-Nay-Ho Valley
- Contact:
Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
The history as I have it is this... The gentleman bought it around 40 years ago and used it as a work truck for ten years. After that it was parked and not driven again. For some reason the heads were removed, and that is the great mystery - why?
It was last registered in 1984 according to the pink slip. The fellow passed away and his son sold me the truck. He said he remembered driving it around way back then. I know it sat outside at some point because there were pine needles in the bed and grill. But it seems to have sat in a closed garage for most of its storage. The only history I uncovered during cleanup was an old road map of the South Bay area, showing populations I wish were still accurate.
Oh yes, and I forgot to answer about the swap meet. Sounds interesting and I may see you there. I need a hub cap.
It was last registered in 1984 according to the pink slip. The fellow passed away and his son sold me the truck. He said he remembered driving it around way back then. I know it sat outside at some point because there were pine needles in the bed and grill. But it seems to have sat in a closed garage for most of its storage. The only history I uncovered during cleanup was an old road map of the South Bay area, showing populations I wish were still accurate.
Oh yes, and I forgot to answer about the swap meet. Sounds interesting and I may see you there. I need a hub cap.
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
So now that you've ruined the perfect patina, have you considered metallic green paint?
In baseball, running into someone is apparently a "collision".
But doing the same thing in a car somehow makes it an "accident".
But doing the same thing in a car somehow makes it an "accident".
- Steve Simmons
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
No metallic on my cars. Too modern. But it will probably end up olive green (light green). For now, the dark green will do. And you never know, Jimmy... you may like the patina of the green underneath better than the cheap black spray paint that was on top of it. It was soft and poorly applied so it wouldn't have lasted forever anyway.
- max71
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Sell the model T. Its a toy. This is a real driver.
- Steve Simmons
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
I think most of the MGs are as much toys as the Model T is. For example I don't consider the T so much of a toy as the GTS. The T is far more practical. I drive it all over the place, hauling stuff and running errands. I never run errands in the GTS, or even the MGA for that matter.
Granted, the '39 will be a far better working truck than the T. But one of the many attractions of the Model T is that it's more unique than anything else we own. I'd actually rather sell one of the MGBs than the T. Not saying that'll happen or anything.
8-foot beams and concrete.....
Granted, the '39 will be a far better working truck than the T. But one of the many attractions of the Model T is that it's more unique than anything else we own. I'd actually rather sell one of the MGBs than the T. Not saying that'll happen or anything.
8-foot beams and concrete.....
- Attachments
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- Model T at work
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- max71
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Steve Simmons wrote: Granted, the '39 will be a far better working truck than the T.
Bingo
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
I bet the guys at the lumber store are shocked when they see you load up the T for a weekend project.
- Steve Simmons
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
That's the problem. Everywhere we go, the workers don't want to load it because they're afraid of damaging the thing. I always have to explain that it was built to be a truck and haul huge loads. They just don't get it because the only time they see something like that is in a parade, so they assume it's some highly valuable and highly fragile show car. Ever see what these things did when they were new?
Just to be fair... By the same argument, the MGB GT is a far better work car than the TC, but I'm not selling the TC!max71 wrote:BingoSteve Simmons wrote: Granted, the '39 will be a far better working truck than the T.
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Yep the T did a lot of work in its day. Its cool that you actually use yours, since so many are simply trailer queens.
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'63 LBC
Plus, a Turbo S (with a damn roof) in the household.
And three Mercedes on 20" wheels. - Location: NM
Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
So, realistically, if you just cut the roof off of the GT you could sell the T, right?
In baseball, running into someone is apparently a "collision".
But doing the same thing in a car somehow makes it an "accident".
But doing the same thing in a car somehow makes it an "accident".
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Looks like fun, Steve. I remember riding around in my Grandfather's '31 wide bed. Of course it didn't have the V8. Congrats.
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Today's progress: Axlectomy! I plan to rebuild everything seen here (axle, brakes, steering linkage, shocks, swivels, hubs, spring) during the rainy days this week.
- Steve Simmons
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
Today's progress: Disassembly of axle and prep for sand blasting. I didn't get to the leaf spring but will do that in the morning before dropping the parts of to be blasted. I couldn't believe how much "crud" came off this thing. The axle was literally double the actual diameter, because of the amount of this stuff on it. I think I've filled up my shop vac just sucking it off the floor throughout the day. The bright side is that it appears the truck was well maintained as far as greasing goes. He just never seemed to wipe up the old grease that came out!
Every nut and bolt came out with relative ease. No penetrating oil or heat was required, and much to Jimmy's dismay I pulled almost the entire thing apart with an adjustable wrench. I did need heat, oil and great force to get the tapered fittings apart. They weren't rusty but were stuck fast.
Let the disassembly begin!
Lots of yucky, nasty crud. I removed pounds of the stuff with an old screwdriver, just so I could find the fittings I needed to remove! This photo is after a LOT of scraping, so most of the gunk is already removed. For reference, the pin you see sticking out was at least 1/4" underneath the outer layer.
This was kind of scary. The wheel studs are almost completely without threads. The threads that are still there are only half height. Obviously original, but they have to go.
More evidence that the original color of this truck was dark green. I'm still looking for more evidence of light gray, but so far no joy.
Think this shackle pin is a bit worn out? For those who don't know, this should be a smooth, round pin. Half of the pin is completely worn away! The other half is deeply grooved. Since there is only a single spring holding the entire front of the truck up, this made me glad I decided to rebuild everything in the front end.
A sad pair of pins with their bushings. I believe these parts may be original to the truck, or at least early replacements. The rubber that is left in the bushing has cloth wound into it, which I haven't seen done in a very long time. The pins wore through the rubber, through the steel outer sleeve and into the axle housing. Fortunately it is still quite sound and a simple bushings replacement will suffice.
Wear in the right hand king pin, and either a deep groove or a crack forming. Again, I'm very glad to be doing this job right about now...
The accompanying bushing, cracked in three places...
Another original part, the inner hub seal. Neat! And it's a really well built item. Looks like I can replace the rubber bit itself to retain the original housing.
And inside there's another surprise, original bearings! I wouldn't doubt that these have been in service since 1939 if they weren't in such perfect shape. The races look brand new. Maybe someone had some new old stock bearings back in the 50's or 60's? Since the truck has been sitting for 30 years in a garage, anything is possible.
That's it for tonight, tomorrow I may have to work on M.G.s.
Every nut and bolt came out with relative ease. No penetrating oil or heat was required, and much to Jimmy's dismay I pulled almost the entire thing apart with an adjustable wrench. I did need heat, oil and great force to get the tapered fittings apart. They weren't rusty but were stuck fast.
Let the disassembly begin!
Lots of yucky, nasty crud. I removed pounds of the stuff with an old screwdriver, just so I could find the fittings I needed to remove! This photo is after a LOT of scraping, so most of the gunk is already removed. For reference, the pin you see sticking out was at least 1/4" underneath the outer layer.
This was kind of scary. The wheel studs are almost completely without threads. The threads that are still there are only half height. Obviously original, but they have to go.
More evidence that the original color of this truck was dark green. I'm still looking for more evidence of light gray, but so far no joy.
Think this shackle pin is a bit worn out? For those who don't know, this should be a smooth, round pin. Half of the pin is completely worn away! The other half is deeply grooved. Since there is only a single spring holding the entire front of the truck up, this made me glad I decided to rebuild everything in the front end.
A sad pair of pins with their bushings. I believe these parts may be original to the truck, or at least early replacements. The rubber that is left in the bushing has cloth wound into it, which I haven't seen done in a very long time. The pins wore through the rubber, through the steel outer sleeve and into the axle housing. Fortunately it is still quite sound and a simple bushings replacement will suffice.
Wear in the right hand king pin, and either a deep groove or a crack forming. Again, I'm very glad to be doing this job right about now...
The accompanying bushing, cracked in three places...
Another original part, the inner hub seal. Neat! And it's a really well built item. Looks like I can replace the rubber bit itself to retain the original housing.
And inside there's another surprise, original bearings! I wouldn't doubt that these have been in service since 1939 if they weren't in such perfect shape. The races look brand new. Maybe someone had some new old stock bearings back in the 50's or 60's? Since the truck has been sitting for 30 years in a garage, anything is possible.
That's it for tonight, tomorrow I may have to work on M.G.s.
- gorms68
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Re: The Great 1939 Ford V8 Project
The wear on those parts is amazing! Makes you wonder what the rest of the truck is like. Are you able to find the replacement parts localy or do you have to order them?
Chris Gorman