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06-04-2014, 09:33 PM | #76 | |
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Clearwater Kansas
Posts: 111
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Re: You shouldn't have but it worked
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We (my father and I ) was a little farther from home when my fuel pump went out on a old 79 f150. We was lucky and had a small one gallon gas can in the back for the lawnmowers. my dad poured the gas into the windshield washer container, then pulled the lines from the hood and put them where they would shoot into the carb. push the squirter, start the truck, start driving home hitting the windshield washer button when it started to die. I learned alot of neat stuff from my dad..
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66 c10 Panel (Wife's) http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=595684 68 c10 LWB |
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06-04-2014, 09:57 PM | #77 | |
RAT1968 '68 Cab/'71 Parts
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Coarsegold, CA
Posts: 2,375
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Re: You shouldn't have but it worked
Quote:
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M17 Coarsegold, CA RAT's shiny now. But always a rat. |
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06-04-2014, 10:42 PM | #78 |
RAT1968 '68 Cab/'71 Parts
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Coarsegold, CA
Posts: 2,375
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Re: You shouldn't have but it worked
My third car was a '52 Chevy 2-door Deluxe (with doorposts).
Looked like this one (I stole from the web and then P-Shopped) when I was done dumping ALL my money from work as a laborer the summer between HS graduation and college. My parents were pissed because every check from a real-man's salary went into painting it, brand new interior from the dash to the package tray, floor to headliner, in either gloss black lacquer, carpet, or black naugahyde. Big steel wheels, reversed (a new thing back then) and painted white... with blackwalls. Three on the tree was solid....but the IL6 smoked...so off to a place we used to have around the States called Automotive Engineering (this was 1964)...I think it was just a franchise rip off for local shops to hang out a sign and get the benefit of national advertising and price fixing. So, I dumped four weeks salary into a rebuild. at Automotive Engineering on Fourth and Lincoln in San Rafael, Ca. It made two full trips to University of Nevada, Reno from my family home in Novato. I was really dumb. My parking off campus netted a ticket every day of the week. Which I happily threw in the glove box. I lived off campus, too. At a rooming house full of non-students, miscreants, people "taking the cure" (waiting out the six-week residency required for a divorce), working stiffs, drunken grandmothers, and gamblers out on their luck. Third trip from home, I was dropping off a friend at Sac State on the way back to Reno and an Automotively Un-Engineered piston and rod went bye-bye. Of course, they laughed at a seventeen-year-old's trying to collect on their sheety guarantee. I took the bus the rest of the way "home" to Reno. Two brothers, Dept. of Nevada Transportation road workers that had lived for over two years at my Reno home, Scotty's Guest House, offered to tow the Chevy to Reno from Sacramento for gas money. On the trip back to the flop house, the younger brother and I discussed a sale to him...and agreed to a price of $375. About an average month's salary for a real person back then. He gave me $75 to bind the deal with the rest coming the next day. I gave him the pink slip. I forgot about the tickets. Back then, the tickets went with the car...but I wasn't thinking about that. It was only paper to me. The next morning, they were both gone. So was the car. Poof!!!!! Thin air. I heard, some years later, that they ran away to Redding, CA. Somehow, I felt avenged for my $300 loss. No way he was going to re-register that car in California without paying some big bucks in back ticket fees. And, that car taught me: 1)... to never dump too much money into something that could go south... Oops! Check that! I didn't learn that! RAT proves that point; 2) No money, no pink slip; 3) Trust only with verification. At least when it comes to material stuff.
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M17 Coarsegold, CA RAT's shiny now. But always a rat. Last edited by magwakeenercew2jh; 06-04-2014 at 10:49 PM. |
06-05-2014, 03:38 AM | #79 |
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Vilseck Germany (currently)
Posts: 317
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Re: You shouldn't have but it worked
Used JB Weld on my radiator to fix a bunch of pin holes that had corroded through. That was in 1998. Never leaked a bit till I replaced the radiator last fall, because the bottom finally rotted out. Never intended for it to be a long term fix, but as we all know "the squeaky wheel gets the grease". The JB Weld repair? Still sealed.
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06-05-2014, 11:45 AM | #80 | |
Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: North Bend Wa
Posts: 355
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Re: You shouldn't have but it worked
Quote:
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65 C20 292 4spd 4:56 Eaton HO52 |
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06-05-2014, 04:55 PM | #81 |
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Clearwater Kansas
Posts: 111
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Re: You shouldn't have but it worked
I actually think he had them shooting into the venturi, but I agree ... going into the float bowl would have worked much better. it had the 300cid straight 6 with a 1 barrel carb so it didn't take much to keep it running to get us home.
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66 c10 Panel (Wife's) http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=595684 68 c10 LWB |
06-12-2014, 11:51 AM | #82 |
Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2014
Location: Pocahontas Arkansas
Posts: 684
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Re: You shouldn't have but it worked
Here are pictures of my cobbled together homebuilt old wrecker. It was a 64 chev 3/4 ton. 250 six granny 4 speed. I moved unblieveably heavy loads with it. The 66 bus still has the 292 engine & drivetrain and it was filled with parts. I pulled it three miles from my old place to my corner. I placed the Front wheels of the bus on a homebuilt dolly to keep from pulling wheelies. the old international 2 ton I just carried it on the tow sling. We used the rig for ten years and drug hundreds of vehicles around. I took it to verasallies mo and brought back a 51 chev sedan delivery. went to Noxapader Miss and towed home a 55 GMC Pk.
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