The 8 Year Project
- SteveG
- Admin
- Posts: 6100
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- Bronco Info: Wilson: 96, Stretched 17.5", coil-overs / Bypasses, 4-link, a fridge and all the amenities :)
- Location: Arroyo Grande, CA
The 8 Year Project
8-ish years, piles of parts untouched for years, many of them rusting, a few major plan changes, a change of ownership and lots and lots of procrastinating... finally, IT BEGINS!
I blew off most of the rivets at work. Once again, I took it to work for rivet removal, temporarily bolted everything on and drove it home. The Snap-On air chisel and a good bit makes quick work of the rivets. Once in the garage, I pulled the beams and radius arm assemblies off.
A change of plans (story of my life) left me with 4 more rivets to remove. I contemplated bolting the front end back on and driving it to work but decided it would take me less time to remove them at home than it would to reassemble and take it to work.
I started by center-punching the rivet heads, then drilled them out starting with 1/8" and working my way up to about 5/16 in a few steps. I don't drill them all the way, though. I only go just passed the frame rail and stop there.
Finally, grab your chisel and give it a few good whacks. The lower one was pretty fast. I counted about 20 swings of the hammer before the head came off. The back of the rivet fell right out. The top one fought me a little more but, admittedly, I did a much worse job of drilling that one... and paid for it.
Tools of the trade.
Drilled & cut rivet head.
The previous plan... probably.
I blew off most of the rivets at work. Once again, I took it to work for rivet removal, temporarily bolted everything on and drove it home. The Snap-On air chisel and a good bit makes quick work of the rivets. Once in the garage, I pulled the beams and radius arm assemblies off.
A change of plans (story of my life) left me with 4 more rivets to remove. I contemplated bolting the front end back on and driving it to work but decided it would take me less time to remove them at home than it would to reassemble and take it to work.
I started by center-punching the rivet heads, then drilled them out starting with 1/8" and working my way up to about 5/16 in a few steps. I don't drill them all the way, though. I only go just passed the frame rail and stop there.
Finally, grab your chisel and give it a few good whacks. The lower one was pretty fast. I counted about 20 swings of the hammer before the head came off. The back of the rivet fell right out. The top one fought me a little more but, admittedly, I did a much worse job of drilling that one... and paid for it.
Tools of the trade.
Drilled & cut rivet head.
The previous plan... probably.
Sho nuff,
SteveG
SteveG
- SteveG
- Admin
- Posts: 6100
- Joined: Sat Dec 05, 2009 10:25 am
- Bronco Info: Wilson: 96, Stretched 17.5", coil-overs / Bypasses, 4-link, a fridge and all the amenities :)
- Location: Arroyo Grande, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
A quick note on air chisel bits.
I've always used a standard air chisel bit. The type that lock in so they won't fly out of the air-chisel but rotate freely. This time I used a non-rotating type... very nice. The standard type work well, the non-rotating type work great! They allow more control and don't come off your target as easily.
I've always used a standard air chisel bit. The type that lock in so they won't fly out of the air-chisel but rotate freely. This time I used a non-rotating type... very nice. The standard type work well, the non-rotating type work great! They allow more control and don't come off your target as easily.
- Attachments
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- Snap-On Chisel.JPG (22.3 KiB) Viewed 1733 times
Sho nuff,
SteveG
SteveG
Re: The 8 Year Project
Could it be? a full width explorer? I was hoping Jeff would give up on that project and sell me the parts. When you are done putting it all together you wanna trade it for my bronco?
- SteveG
- Admin
- Posts: 6100
- Joined: Sat Dec 05, 2009 10:25 am
- Bronco Info: Wilson: 96, Stretched 17.5", coil-overs / Bypasses, 4-link, a fridge and all the amenities :)
- Location: Arroyo Grande, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
Well that was the plan up until very recently. Everything was in place to do the conversion but a back injury has Jeff re-thinking whether or not he wants a super-wide, hole-eating truck. I still have a set of stock width Autofab D35 axle-housings and we might just end up putting those on and calling it good. So basically, a low-buck re-do of my green Explorer from days of old. Our plans are in a constant state of flux, so we'll see!Wood wrote:Could it be? a full width explorer?
Sho nuff,
SteveG
SteveG
- tcm glx
- Peanut Butter
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- Bronco Info: 93 Ford Bronco 5.8
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Re: The 8 Year Project
Explorers are cool!! Looking forward to this build. I like the idea of stock width, find some of the Ranger FXII Alcoas, slap on a set of 33x10.5s and keep it STEALTH!
Oh, and add baby seats in the back of course.
Oh, and add baby seats in the back of course.
- BajaF250
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Re: The 8 Year Project
That's where it's at!tcm glx wrote:Explorers are cool!! Looking forward to this build. I like the idea of stock width, find some of the Ranger FXII Alcoas, slap on a set of 33x10.5s and keep it STEALTH!
Oh, and add baby seats in the back of course.
- ChaseTruck754
- Spy/Ninja
- Posts: 9194
- Joined: Thu Jan 28, 2010 9:46 am
- Bronco Info: Don't have one - just old Ford trucks
- Location: Huntington Beach, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
Sounds familiar. The more time I sit here & think about the next project the more the idea morphs & changes. One day I may actually get to it, and it may take me 8 years too!SteveG wrote:Our plans are in a constant state of flux, so we'll see!
Good to hear your 8 years are up though & you're moving.
Plan to have it in Pismo?
Owner of only dead and forgotten projects
- poolman
- Posts: 179
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- Bronco Info: 84 Bronco,Body off reconstruction. Auto Fab suspension,mix of 84-96 parts.
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Re: The 8 Year Project
My hand still hurts from knocking rivits out of my frame. pm
84 Bronco 351W,C-6,9 Inch,Work in process
83 Bronco 302,C-6,8.8, beater for parts
94 Bronco roller for parts
91 F150 4x4for parts
96 Bronco for parts
84 Bronco for 351W
83 Bronco 302,C-6,8.8, beater for parts
94 Bronco roller for parts
91 F150 4x4for parts
96 Bronco for parts
84 Bronco for 351W
- SteveG
- Admin
- Posts: 6100
- Joined: Sat Dec 05, 2009 10:25 am
- Bronco Info: Wilson: 96, Stretched 17.5", coil-overs / Bypasses, 4-link, a fridge and all the amenities :)
- Location: Arroyo Grande, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
It's no secret. I'm a big fan of "speaking softly".BajaF250 wrote:That's where it's at!tcm glx wrote:Explorers are cool!! Looking forward to this build. I like the idea of stock width, find some of the Ranger FXII Alcoas, slap on a set of 33x10.5s and keep it STEALTH!
Oh, and add baby seats in the back of course.
Hmmm. I hadn't really thought about it. If it ends up being stock width, that's totally doable. Full width... hell no. I should finish it before then so He and Tristen can at least cruise around the dunes with the rest of the clan.ChaseTruck754 wrote:Plan to have it in Pismo?
Sho nuff,
SteveG
SteveG
- SteveG
- Admin
- Posts: 6100
- Joined: Sat Dec 05, 2009 10:25 am
- Bronco Info: Wilson: 96, Stretched 17.5", coil-overs / Bypasses, 4-link, a fridge and all the amenities :)
- Location: Arroyo Grande, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
Decisions, decisions....
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- IMG_3036 (640x480).jpg (258.11 KiB) Viewed 1609 times
Sho nuff,
SteveG
SteveG
- yikes
- Founder
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- Bronco Info: 1996 with tires and stuff
- Location: Yucaipa, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
economig wrote:Top one
Agreed.
- ESHALLBETTER
- Posts: 1579
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Re: The 8 Year Project
Another vote for top set.
- tcm glx
- Peanut Butter
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Re: The 8 Year Project
Going against the grain, stick to stock width sleeper.
- yikes
- Founder
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Re: The 8 Year Project
Booooo.tcm glx wrote:Going against the grain, stick to stock width sleeper.
- AussieRod
- Posts: 2804
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Re: The 8 Year Project
Steve, I' d go with whatever is the cost effective option, so it can get going quicker and be useful
- yikes
- Founder
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- Joined: Sun Dec 06, 2009 7:51 am
- Bronco Info: 1996 with tires and stuff
- Location: Yucaipa, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
Booooooooo.AussieRod wrote:Steve, I' d go with whatever is the cost effective option, so it can get going quicker and be useful
- AussieRod
- Posts: 2804
- Joined: Sun Sep 05, 2010 1:43 am
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- Location: Downunder
Re: The 8 Year Project
Yeah, yeah, I know. Just trying to help Steve's ADD and get the project moving
- SteveG
- Admin
- Posts: 6100
- Joined: Sat Dec 05, 2009 10:25 am
- Bronco Info: Wilson: 96, Stretched 17.5", coil-overs / Bypasses, 4-link, a fridge and all the amenities :)
- Location: Arroyo Grande, CA
Re: The 8 Year Project
Both options were paid for years ago....AussieRod wrote:Steve, I' d go with whatever is the cost effective option, so it can get going quicker and be useful
I'll probably put it together stock width for now and maybe upgrade later. The full size parts have been sitting for over 6 years. Another few ain't gonna hurt!
Sho nuff,
SteveG
SteveG
- ChaseTruck754
- Spy/Ninja
- Posts: 9194
- Joined: Thu Jan 28, 2010 9:46 am
- Bronco Info: Don't have one - just old Ford trucks
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Re: The 8 Year Project
I vote top shelf.
Although I am starting to be a convert to the "just getting running with whatever is quickest so you can enjoy it" camp...
Although I am starting to be a convert to the "just getting running with whatever is quickest so you can enjoy it" camp...
Owner of only dead and forgotten projects