The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network







Register or Log In To remove these advertisements.

Go Back   The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network > 47 - Current classic GM Trucks > The 1947 - 1959 Chevrolet & GMC Pickups Message Board > Projects and Builds

Web 67-72chevytrucks.com


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 05-13-2022, 11:06 AM   #351
dsraven
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: calgary alberta
Posts: 8,337
Re: 1958 Saab story

hey Josh, good to hear you got it up and running. are you driving the crap outta it now? hope so, cool looking unit for sure. I bet you get lots of looks when driving it.
whats your new project? another frame/body swap?
how about a few pics of the current project from all angles now that it is sitting how you like it.
dsraven is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-13-2022, 09:50 PM   #352
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

Here's the new project. It's a 1967 Buick special wagon. All original with 62k Miles on it. The floor pans are wasted, but the body is solid and straight. The plan is to sell the 65 skylark wagon to buy a 2008-2009 Pontiac G8 gt or gxp and cut the wagon floor out and set it on the g8 floor pan.

The panel truck will be my dad's daily driver, since I have the Jeep.

-Josh
Attached Images
     
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-23-2023, 09:15 PM   #353
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

Since dad and I are planning to take the 68 jeep trailblazer ss and the panel truck on the hot rod power tour this year, I figured it probably needs functioning wipers. Thankfully, brothers trucks has a life time warranty on the setup. The aluminum tube shot out of the holding bracket and kinked the first time I turned them on with the wiper arms installed. Then the motor developed a dead short and just popped fuses as soon as you turned the switch.

I figured there were probably too many Bends from the motor position to the first wiper arm. So I replaced the first aluminum tube with a length of steel brake line. Then I mounted the wiper motor at the driver's side kick panel. Now the drive cable is almost a straight shot to the first wiper armature with a slight bend along the floor pan and a large 90 degree radius just under the dash cover. I made a bracket out of bed frame rail to secure it to the entry step. It works on low and high speed now and it's not even in the way as your swing your feet in and out of the truck

Josh
Attached Images
     
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R

Last edited by Rickysnickers; 04-24-2023 at 10:18 AM.
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-23-2023, 09:52 PM   #354
dsraven
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: calgary alberta
Posts: 8,337
Re: 1958 Saab story

did you have plans on the cut away on the end of the dash? I will eventually end up there too.
dsraven is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-24-2023, 06:58 PM   #355
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

Quote:
Originally Posted by dsraven View Post
did you have plans on the cut away on the end of the dash? I will eventually end up there too.
On mine, the dash pad fit, but the piece with the defrost grill and speaker grilles has to be shortened. Now, left to right, the window cranks are so far forward, I welded up the holes and went with power windows from nu-relics.

Josh
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-27-2023, 10:42 PM   #356
Madkidd007
Registered User
 
Madkidd007's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2018
Location: Locust grove, Ga
Posts: 2,238
Re: 1958 Saab story

Quote:
Originally Posted by gottattooz View Post
On mine, the dash pad fit, but the piece with the defrost grill and speaker grilles has to be shortened. Now, left to right, the window cranks are so far forward, I welded up the holes and went with power windows from nu-relics.

Josh
This guy again
__________________
70 C10 highschool truck now C20 cummins powered
72 Crew Denali, Bigger, Stronger, Faster, well you get the point.....
the ole 65 continental
Syclone killer AWD T56 LS

Paypal please pay as Goods&Services Madkidd00000007@yahoo.com
Madkidd007 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-29-2023, 12:09 AM   #357
3757chevy
Senior Member

 
3757chevy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2016
Location: Near Canon City ,Colorado
Posts: 4,070
Re: 1958 Saab story

I read through your build the last two days . WOW!! Love it. I always liked the 55-59 Panels and Suburbans . Been following on your wagon build too. I never knew Saab and Envoy/Trailblazers were at all similar. Not that there's not enough lighting up front but some of those 3/4 in lights might look cool in the left over bumper bolt holes .
__________________
'35 1/2 ton Pickup (bought 2020) '68 C10 Suburban (bought 2021) '72 K5 Blazer (bought 2013)
'67 Stepside (bought 1997-sold 2021) '96 Bronco Eddie Bauer (inherited 2010)
My 1st day here-'67 C10(sold)and '72 K5 Blazer http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=702056
MIKE
3757chevy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-11-2023, 04:33 PM   #358
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

I thought about getting a dimple die and reshaping the holes in the front bumper. I see all these extra lights on these new trucks and I keep going back to "less is more".

Josh
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-31-2023, 12:56 AM   #359
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

The transmission input shaft speed sensor is acting up, so I have to replace it. When I jacked up the truck to start pulling the transmission, I noticed an oil leak from the engine. The exhaust y- pipe is in the way of everything, the transfer case has to come off, etc. etc. Since I'm going to pull the engine anyways to check for cracks, I can leave the transmission in place and replace the sensor.

Then there's the whole "while I'm at it" moment. I was fine with the way the truck ran with a stock lq4, but a little thumpity thumpity would also be cool. So I ordered the Brian tooley racing "Truck Norris" camshaft and everything that goes with it. New gaskets and lifters and springs.

I couldn't find any shorty headers to bolt up to the stock y-pipe, so I ordered the speed engineering headers and y-pipe without cats that bolts directly to the existing exhaust.

All new belts and tensioner, spark plug wires and whatever other new shiny things that will nickel and dime me to death, but I'm excited to hear the new exhaust note when she's finished.

Josh
Attached Images
   
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-31-2023, 08:16 AM   #360
6DoF
Registered User
 
6DoF's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: somewhere, PA
Posts: 1,100
Re: 1958 Saab story

nice!!

6DoF is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-03-2023, 01:24 AM   #361
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

Well, a little forehead smack and some good news. I found the oil leak. Josh (maddkidd) had a corvette oil pan on the saab when I bought it. I put the original pan back on. It never dawned on me that the original oil pan has its own dipstick tube hole. So, along with me motor mounts and other miscellaneous bits and pieces, I ordered a correct dipstick tube for the oil pan and a plug for the hole in the block.

Josh
Attached Images
   
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-03-2023, 01:06 PM   #362
daveshilling
Registered User
 
daveshilling's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: roseville
Posts: 823
Re: 1958 Saab story

Quote:
Originally Posted by gottattooz View Post
Well, a little forehead smack and some good news. I found the oil leak. Josh (maddkidd) had a corvette oil pan on the saab when I bought it. I put the original pan back on. It never dawned on me that the original oil pan has its own dipstick tube hole. So, along with me motor mounts and other miscellaneous bits and pieces, I ordered a correct dipstick tube for the oil pan and a plug for the hole in the block.

Josh
Thank you, dipstick tube hole, for making Josh get a new Cam and more power!!
daveshilling is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-04-2023, 07:48 PM   #363
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

Here's the list of goodies that are showing up.

Speed engineering headers with cat delete y-pipe.

243 aluminum heads to replace the 317 heads. From what I'm reading online, the 243 heads (64.5 cc chambers) should bump up the compression ratio from 9.4 to 10.2 compared to the 317 heads (71.5 cc chambers). I don't know how accurate that is, but I did the same thing on my jeep with a similar camshaft and it pulls strong on 87 octane

Truck norris cam kit with new lifters, trays, springs, push rods, valve guide seals.

I also gotta all new belts, tensioner and idler pulley.

I'm having a tough time removing the transmission oil pan. It's been sealed with gray rtv and it's not letting loose. I'll keep you posted

Josh
Attached Images
    
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-05-2023, 02:55 PM   #364
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

Well I finally got the trans oil pan off, so I could unplug the input shaft speed sensor. What I didn't know was there is another sensor the pokes up into the front pump, and I broke that, so after replacing the input speed sensor, I still spent another $130 for a harness and a filter kit.

Josh
Attached Images
  
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2023, 02:54 AM   #365
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

Chipping away. Replaced the motor mounts, camshaft, lifters and trays and valve springs. Still waiting on more parts, but it's good to make progress.

Josh
Attached Images
   
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2023, 04:52 PM   #366
daveshilling
Registered User
 
daveshilling's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: roseville
Posts: 823
Re: 1958 Saab story

Quote:
Originally Posted by gottattooz View Post
Chipping away. Replaced the motor mounts, camshaft, lifters and trays and valve springs. Still waiting on more parts, but it's good to make progress.

Josh
all forward progress is good! Motor mounts are an underrated step, for sure.

maybe you can etch/sharpie the cam specs inside the timing cover? Cams become a mystery once they're out of the box, it seems. You just gotta remember or keep a build sheet.
daveshilling is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2023, 05:21 PM   #367
Madkidd007
Registered User
 
Madkidd007's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2018
Location: Locust grove, Ga
Posts: 2,238
Re: 1958 Saab story

Quote:
Originally Posted by daveshilling View Post
all forward progress is good! Motor mounts are an underrated step, for sure.

maybe you can etch/sharpie the cam specs inside the timing cover? Cams become a mystery once they're out of the box, it seems. You just gotta remember or keep a build sheet.
Once they are in a motor who cares though? Not like it has to ever be reference again even though the truck Norris specs are as easy to find as google searching it
__________________
70 C10 highschool truck now C20 cummins powered
72 Crew Denali, Bigger, Stronger, Faster, well you get the point.....
the ole 65 continental
Syclone killer AWD T56 LS

Paypal please pay as Goods&Services Madkidd00000007@yahoo.com
Madkidd007 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2023, 06:40 PM   #368
daveshilling
Registered User
 
daveshilling's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: roseville
Posts: 823
Re: 1958 Saab story

they get sold, people get old and forget, website links go down. It's not insane
daveshilling is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-08-2023, 10:32 PM   #369
Madkidd007
Registered User
 
Madkidd007's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2018
Location: Locust grove, Ga
Posts: 2,238
Re: 1958 Saab story

Quote:
Originally Posted by daveshilling View Post
they get sold, people get old and forget, website links go down. It's not insane
I’ll give you the selling thing. But again once it’s in, running, and tuned it’s irrelevant.
__________________
70 C10 highschool truck now C20 cummins powered
72 Crew Denali, Bigger, Stronger, Faster, well you get the point.....
the ole 65 continental
Syclone killer AWD T56 LS

Paypal please pay as Goods&Services Madkidd00000007@yahoo.com
Madkidd007 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-09-2023, 02:54 AM   #370
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

All new wiring harness, trans filter and pan gasket installed.

Bell housing and torque converter installed

New motor mounts on. Headers and y-pipe loosely assembled and new cylinder heads installed. Making good progress. I'll recheck everything before I put the push rods and rocker on. And hopefully I'll have everything buttoned up and running soon

Fingers crossed for no more leaks

Josh
Attached Images
   
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R

Last edited by Rickysnickers; 11-09-2023 at 10:44 AM.
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-09-2023, 10:41 AM   #371
Rickysnickers
Senior Member

 
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Eagle, ID
Posts: 3,067
Re: 1958 Saab story

Quote:
Originally Posted by daveshilling View Post
maybe you can etch/sharpie the cam specs inside the timing cover?
Excellent idea!!! Never thought of doing that.
Rickysnickers is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-09-2023, 07:15 PM   #372
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

I got her all put back together. Did a small shake down run around the block. Nothing aggressive. It still needs to be tuned, but it sounds nasty. Hopefully everything works like it's supposed to and I don't have to do anything else but change the oil and put fuel in it for a while

Josh
Attached Images
 
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11-09-2023, 08:34 PM   #373
gottattooz
Registered User
 
gottattooz's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Hampton, Ga
Posts: 919
Re: 1958 Saab story

I got her all put back together. Did a small shake down run around the block. Nothing aggressive. It still needs to be tuned, but it sounds nasty. Hopefully everything works like it's supposed to and I don't have to do anything else but change the oil and put fuel in it for a while

Josh
__________________
1967 Buick Special wagon
1968 Jeep Wagoneer
1958 Chevy Panel Truck
2017 Suzuki M109R
gottattooz is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:38 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2022 67-72chevytrucks.com