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#1 |
Straight "6" Shooter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Salem, Oregon
Posts: 105
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OE Accessories sheet questions
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__________________
1966 LWB 292 I6 & Granny Low ![]() If you listen intently, you can hear a FORD rusting in the distance. ![]() My LUG NUTS take more TORQUE than your HONDA makes! ![]() |
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#2 |
Account Suspended
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Kansas City, KS
Posts: 3,906
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Re: OE Accessories sheet questions
raiden7800:
Congrats on the find. What you found is called the build sheet. It was placed on the back of the glove box door, as well as between the seat springs and the padding behind the drivers seat back. Over the years the paper becomes brittle and falls apart, never to be seen. With regards to the P/S, an option on the '60-'66 Chevy trucks was Power-Assist Steering. If your truck had it, you should have some evidence of it, for example a power steering pump or brackets mounted to the drivers side of the engine below the alternator, as well as a power steering cylinder with high side and low side hoses coming out of it. This cylinder is inline with the steering linkage. With this set-up, the steering gear box will be a manual gear box. The power-assist comes from fluid circulating through the pump and the cylinder. There are many good reference manuals available for the '60-'66 Chevy trucks, including 1960-1966 Chevy/GMC Factory Assembly Manual and the 1960 through 1966 Chevy Truck Shop Manuals and Supplements. There are available at many of the aftermarket truck parts supplieres, including: www.bowtiebits.com www.lmctruck.com www.classicparts.com www.brotherstrucks.com www.oldchevytrucks.com to name a few. Good luck with your project and I hope this information is helpful. Tony The big black box you see under the hood is standard equipment for trucks that came from the factory with heat/defrost. On the '64-'66 Chevy trucks, there were three options: no heat, Thrift Air heat/defrost or Deluxe Air heat/defrost. If the truck had no heat/defrost, there will be heater delete plates on the engine bay side of the firewall. If your truck has the Thrift Air heat/defrost, there will be a single pull knob between the dash cluster and the ash tray. If your truck has the Deluxe Air heat/defrost, there will be three levers in the dash. Trucks with factory A/C will have the opening for the ash tray oversized for the air diffusers and a very large underdash air plenum. Attached is a photo of a factory A/C set-up in a '66 Chevy C10 swb fleet with a big back window. Last edited by LILRED66; 06-24-2007 at 07:12 AM. |
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#3 |
Straight "6" Shooter
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Salem, Oregon
Posts: 105
|
Re: OE Accessories sheet questions
Thanks for all of the info! I just figured that since my crank pulley had an extra slot on there, and the slot does have wear marks in it, that there was obviously something attatched to it at some point, and if it was power assist steering, I would like to put it back on (that sucker is hard to turn at a standstill!).
__________________
1966 LWB 292 I6 & Granny Low ![]() If you listen intently, you can hear a FORD rusting in the distance. ![]() My LUG NUTS take more TORQUE than your HONDA makes! ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#4 |
Account Suspended
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Kansas City, KS
Posts: 3,906
|
Re: OE Accessories sheet questions
The power assist steering is a nice factory option, if operating correctly. If not, I have done the power steering conversion on several of my '64-'66 Chevy trucks, as well as a few others. Power steering makes a dramatic difference in ease of operation of these trucks, not to mention a very desireable factory option, if it is power assist steering.
Tony |
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