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Old 08-16-2009, 01:14 AM   #1
*Dylan
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The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Well, my truck is finally tagged and insured, so that means I get to start driving it just in time for college! Anyways, it's funny driving my truck and listening to all the squeaks and rattles that go on. I also found out that the truck doesn't enjoy going too fast today as well. I guess it's the combination of 2 spd. Powerglide and 250 inline six that say no to my go fast attitude. Well, that and gas... Haha.

Took my truck to the dump today to drop off a load of trash and on the way back since it's in the middle of no where I decided to let the engine breathe a little and gave it some gas. Made it up to 70 MPH, the engine was screaming as my brick nearly broke the sound barrier, or so it felt. I love the looks I get from people and my dad has had a few people come up and say they've seen me driving it around. They tend to say it looks really cool and like a rat rod. A few days ago I got the pleasure of parking beside a mint 69 c10 with a 383 stroker motor in it, me and the guy sat outside in the parking lot and chatted a bit, was really cool. I kind of felt like I belonged and not like the pestering kid that just wants to know about what your driving. I find people also don't blow you off as much if they own a classic and see you in one as well.

One thing that sucks though is the fact that my headlights are the equivalent of strapping two average flashlights or one good maglight to your hood. It's a nightmare driving at night, god forbid when I have to drive at night and it's raining as well. I'll be stuck with a flashlight and windshield wipers that have two speeds, slow as hell, and slow. My first time driving at night I got followed by what I think was a cop and I had one headlight and one tail light out, that was a nerve racking experience as I still have yet to get a ticket.

Just felt like writing something for some reason and figured I'd do it here. What experiences have you had while driving your truck, and what joys/dislikes do you find in them?

Oh, and you should have seen the look on the peoples faces at the dump when I hopped back out of my truck specifically to take a picture, it was great!

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Old 08-16-2009, 01:25 AM   #2
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Nice truck! Mine was a screamer on the highway when I first got it on the road. The window rubber was so rotted, ALL the windows rattled, and the windshield cracked itself. Talk about a racket.

Where'd you get the rims?
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Old 08-16-2009, 01:35 AM   #3
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Great story Dylan...Neat looking truck!
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Old 08-16-2009, 01:47 AM   #4
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

The rims are 15 x 8 American Racing rims, not sure of the name of them. I got them from a fellow board member as they were on his truck at one point. If I remember right it was billsbowtie who I bought them from.
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Old 08-16-2009, 02:22 AM   #5
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Nice to see you finally driving it Dylan. We finally got back to FL and I've been working on updating the suspension in my 68. It's nice to wrench on something that runs, . Have you tried changing your headlights to the new sealed beam halogen bulbs? That's one of the first things I did to my 68. They're not that expensive, and while not as good as the new HID lights, they're better than the old ones. I also installed LED tail lights. Safety first!

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Old 08-16-2009, 10:09 AM   #6
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Halogen bulbs and relays will help a lot. Cool truck.
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Old 08-16-2009, 11:02 AM   #7
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Check all of your grounds to be sure they are hooked up and clean. You also need a ground strap going from the engine to the body and from the body to the frame. That may help your light intensity issues.
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Old 08-16-2009, 11:37 AM   #8
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

good story....glad to see you finally driving it....
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Old 08-16-2009, 12:24 PM   #9
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Great story! You're on the high way to happiness. Thirty years ago that was me in a 49 Chevy in just about the same condition,like you cruising around enjoying the people who seemed to approve of the old girl dodging the law till I got that thing really road worthy. I fixed lights, wore out shifter and at least three out of four breaks, only had one good one for a while. I changed my rear end out with one that had 4/11 gears in it and wow, I could cruse at 60 all day long; or at least till my arms gave out steering with the old front end that was under that thing.
The more you do to you're truck the greater a bond you will have with it and appreciate the efforts of others. I've never been without a project vehicle for any amount of time since. Congrats, you have a good looking truck.
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Old 08-16-2009, 01:23 PM   #10
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

your high speed cruising desires can be a rearend swap away. The 3.07 gear puts 70 - 80 in the sweet spot of a small block, and I can only assume (never owning one) that an inline's power curve is about the same... just less power.
On your headlights, the first thing you should do, is aim them. since the suspention has been modified, the headlights are probably no longer pointing where they should be. Then, follow the black wire on the headlight plug (both of them) to where it bolts to the core support. Unbolt it and sand the spot, and the wires that go there to bare metal. The next step depends on haw comefortable you are with electrical work. If you are good at it, then wire in some relays. LMC and MAD enterprises, and I'm sure painless all have kits, or you can fap up your own for less than 10 bucks with some junkyard parts. If you are more of a remove and install kind of guy, then go to any local parts store, and get the Sylvania silver star sealed beam headlamps... these things are the shiznit. They are brighter and whiter than most new cars. They actually do more than the relay conversion, but doing both will get you seeing into next week. Try it, you'll be amazed.
Checking your other grounds will also help. You do need to make sure the battery to engine cable is tight and clean, then make sure the engine is grounded to the frame. Personally, i prefer a little more than the little BS straps issued at the factory. Then the core support to the frame. Again, ensure you have clean paintless/corrosionless connections. Then a strap from frame to cab and frame to bed (esp if you have a wooden floor) will finish your grounding inspection.
Doing this will help in many ways, you'll have brighter lights all around, less resistance in the system, and you know they are good to go. The ground side of the system is almost always ignored untill they become the problem, and the responce is always something like "huh, I never knew the ground was so important" Check out the electrical section... have some FAQ's in there, and lots of good info on general basic electrical.
Your truck looks pretty sweet... now drive the crap out of it anf enjoy it!
Oh... and rain x is a wonderful thing. I don't even turn my wipers on anymore on the freeway. Although, I feel my wipers are too fast in my burb.
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Old 08-16-2009, 01:51 PM   #11
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

I really like your truck.The older guys tend to really appreciate when a younger guy is into this stuff.Not me,I hate it.Gimme that thing before I...just kidding!!
You must have bad grounds.The headlights aren`t that awful in these trucks.Replace you window channel and squeegies for a major difference.It will save your door glass from cracking and doors from rusting,roo.
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Old 08-16-2009, 02:45 PM   #12
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

truck looks really cool
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Old 08-17-2009, 08:13 AM   #13
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Good looking ride!! I drive my 64 almost everyday... I get a brand new BMW 535 as a perk with my job with free gas and insurance and it sits in my driveway!!
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Old 08-17-2009, 06:43 PM   #14
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Thanks! And where do you work by the way? Sounds like a nice perk to have.
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Old 08-17-2009, 09:44 PM   #15
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Cool story! I enjoy the nods and looks I get in my truck too. You really do become part of a brotherhood. People look at you like they already know you. I'm not even sure I want to ever paint it either because it's so recognizable. And talk about noisy... Basically no shocks in the back and rusted out wood bed frames rattle all day. And with no window felts, I just usually hold the drivers side window so only half the windows rattle. It doesn't help that there's 8 of those stupid huge speed bumps on my way to work every morning. But with no a/c, shocks, tail lights, bumpers or inspection sticker, I still prefer it over the dodge with all the amenities.
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Old 08-18-2009, 10:58 AM   #16
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

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Thanks! And where do you work by the way? Sounds like a nice perk to have.
I am the service director at a BMW dealer. The job has some great perks.. We carry Porsche, Audi and BMW and build alot of race cars... I am always hammering on something fast that handles like nobodys business..
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Old 08-19-2009, 10:20 AM   #17
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

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Cool story! I enjoy the nods and looks I get in my truck too. You really do become part of a brotherhood. People look at you like they already know you. I'm not even sure I want to ever paint it either because it's so recognizable. And talk about noisy... Basically no shocks in the back and rusted out wood bed frames rattle all day. And with no window felts, I just usually hold the drivers side window so only half the windows rattle. It doesn't help that there's 8 of those stupid huge speed bumps on my way to work every morning. But with no a/c, shocks, tail lights, bumpers or inspection sticker, I still prefer it over the dodge with all the amenities.
Haha better than me, I pull the window down by hand then stuff a door handle escutcheon in between the glass and the door to keep the glass still. It works pretty good!

C10 Addict, how would you go about getting a job such as that? I'm just starting college and I'm open to all sorts of fields and jobs and have no clue what I want to do.
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Old 08-19-2009, 10:50 AM   #18
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Great truck. When I was in high school I needed some transportation. I bought a 69 long step from a guy down the street. He removed the bed (rusted out I lived in Mo at the time) and left it that way and sold it. After he found out I was leaving for the Army he sold it to me for $400. It was a striaght 6 and 3 on the tree. Once it was good and warm it would smoke pretty good. I just went to the locel jiffy lube and bought the cheapest stuff they had and put in. Gave a new meaning to check the gas and fill up the oil. I liked that truck it had character. One of the many reasons I love these trucks!!
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Old 08-19-2009, 12:55 PM   #19
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

My truck also enjoys taking a dump.
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Old 08-19-2009, 01:59 PM   #20
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

Cool truck, sounds like my trash hauler, 6cyl 3 on the tree, the driver's door flies open once in a while going around a corner, have to remember to keep right of cars. I'm gonna fix that windshield leak one of these years.
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Old 08-19-2009, 04:31 PM   #21
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

The OP for this thread has indeed hit the nail on the head by beginning the title with "The Joys...". I think we all agree with that.

In just the few short months I have owned my 71 C20 (which is the first classic automobile, American made, rusty, gas guzzling, rolling piece of Americana I have ever been so fortunate to own) I have found myself falling so deeply for not only what it is [an ole' truck], but also embracing the lifestyle, the community, history and heritage of these great vehicles as well.

My truck has lent me a whole new view on not only being a 67-72 fan, or even a Chevy fan, but has enhanced my depth in being an enthusiast of all things automotive, and for this I will always be grateful.


Her name is Athena (first vehicle I've ever given a name to haha). Shes a greasy old girl with oil coating everything from the valve cover gaskets down. 3/4 ton screamer with a granny transmission and a 4:10 posi. Rides like a Caddy though and even though the heater is mended with army-green duct tape provides ample heat in subzero temps. She runs nice and rich and right now is undergoing some surgery with fresh trailing arms (props to Hart Rod) and new sheetmetal - and so continues the growth of bond between man and machine. I wouldn't have it any other way!
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Old 08-19-2009, 05:47 PM   #22
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

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Shes a greasy old girl with oil coating everything from the valve cover gaskets down.
I call that the "Preventative Anti-Rust Coating" on mine. And seriously... there is no rust on her from the valve cover gaskets down.

Oh, and I named mine the Green Demon, because it's loud, fast, and scares the crap out of hybrid cars like the Prius.

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Old 08-19-2009, 06:01 PM   #23
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

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I call that the "Preventative Anti-Rust Coating" on mine. And seriously... there is no rust on her from the valve cover gaskets down.

Oh, and I named mine the Green Demon, because it's loud, fast, and scares the crap out of hybrid cars like the Prius.

Toad
Haha! Exactly the reason I have no motive to clean any of the grease yet!

And I too also find joy in the fact that Prius owners get all teary-eyed when I approach them in their rainbow-emitting tree-huger sanctuary
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Old 08-19-2009, 06:14 PM   #24
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

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Haha! Exactly the reason I have no motive to clean any of the grease yet!

And I too also find joy in the fact that Prius owners get all teary-eyed when I approach them in their rainbow-emitting tree-huger sanctuary
The prius wasn't out yet when my girl died, and I haven't resurrected her yet... but... here in Texas, every now and then they have a smog checking vehicle on the on ramps. I would go up those on ramps at WOT... and I'm pretty sure the next 3 cars behind me failed after going through the carbon cloud I left behind.
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Old 08-19-2009, 06:31 PM   #25
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Re: The Joys of Driving an Old Truck.

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Originally Posted by Longhorn Man View Post
your high speed cruising desires can be a rearend swap away. The 3.07 gear puts 70 - 80 in the sweet spot of a small block, and I can only assume (never owning one) that an inline's power curve is about the same... just less power.
Adding 3.08's to a powerglide and an old 250 almost sounds dangerous. Atleast around Houston it would be. My old truck with a 350 and 3.08's needed more go from a stop at times.

Quote:
Originally Posted by toddtheodd View Post
The prius wasn't out yet when my girl died, and I haven't resurrected her yet... but... here in Texas, every now and then they have a smog checking vehicle on the on ramps. I would go up those on ramps at WOT... and I'm pretty sure the next 3 cars behind me failed after going through the carbon cloud I left behind.
They have this one emissions tester on an onramp on I-10 near my house. I floor it just above the kickdown speed into first so that it has to pull all the way from the bottow to the top of second (little rich smelling down low at wot) Driving an old polluter is sooo much fun. I like to stomp on it near hybrids as well.
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