I have a very clean '60 C10 - 53,000 original miles. I got my hands on the front half of an extra hood, and got the bright idea to mirror the eyebrows down low..... I have the turn signal inserts too. Conceptually, I think it works. Only thing is, I would rather not integrate this piece onto the front fenders. I'm sure it would look better, but I just don't want to f up the awesome panels on this truck. So..... do ya'll think I can pull this off as a stand alone bumper kind of thing? Or will it only work if I worked it into the body? Thanks in advance for your input! Ben
It kinda looks like it would make the front of the truck look huge. Like the new trucks look. Intagrated into the body might be better but I'm thinking '60s custom aka Roth et all kinda look. I'd love to see what you come up with when finished. Normal Norman
Used to be a HAMB truck that was done that way, the hood section was used like a valance or roll pan. Looked pretty good I always thought.
I think if you sectioned it down to a smaller scale, it would look a little better. Right now it looks too big, but I like the idea.
I agree. Thin it down vertically and tuck it in tighter, keep the ends the same so they wrap farther back. I think the front of the hood needs to be even or the leading edge, just slightly(look at the angle of the side of the grill) so it doesn't look too bulky. I like it! I would also try to duplicate the horizontal grills of the main grill in the openings.
Idea looks like my cousin glendales old truck : heres a thread he posted awhile back with more pictures when he was looking for it ,also used the same idea as a rollpan on the back: http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=524338
It is disrupting the clean lines. Trying too hard to be different. Keep it simple, this gennie deserves a lowering and tasteful detailing. Save a rougher ride and really down size the mods.
If you try to include just a few radical design elements, it will look odd every time. With radical custom work, it's always all or nothing. Bumper to bumper complete to the last detail, or you are just creating something that looks confused. Your comment.... " I would rather not integrate this piece onto the front fenders. I'm sure it would look better, but I just don't want to f up the awesome panels on this truck."....... tells me that you may not be ready to commit to something this extreme. I would suggest starting your experimenting on something that is not quite so nice.
Not doin it for me ,too bulky and looks kinda catfish.A flipped stock bumper makes these trucks look good.
I dig it.... Now figure something out for the back...you my friend are on your way to a semi Kustom truck...the pic above is killer. I would have to cover it in a late 50's early 60's style paint scheme, some cool kustom hubcaps, and some of the trim needs a bath in a vat of chrome, go for it!
You can't build a car or truck by committee or focus group. If you do, you end up with a modern minivan.
Don't put it in the front, use it like a rolled pan/bumper in the rear. Put the taillights in the oval openings.
Bring the nostril holes up until the sheetmetal around them would be in line with the center line of the headlights. put the headlights in the nostrils, small bulbs. leave the grille opening above it plain and open. Put a 63 hood on it, and fill in the park lights on it.
Those trucks already look like a oddball radical treatment on the verge of wired. The 59 looks great! The 64 looks great. Run a 64 hood with your current lower treatment and it will look really nice, subtle custom and more like Chevy would/should have done things if the guy in charge of 59 taillight didn't get to do 60 truck hoods.
On a moderate-to-extensively customized truck, I like the look. (though cutting up one of those hoods is a shame--they're extremely hard to come by) On a mild truck, it doesn't work. As the only modification, it wouldn't work at all. If you want to do something different, flip the front bumper upside down and tuck it in tighter. Otherwise, lower it, improve the suspension and brakes, and drive it. -Brad
Gary and BJ have an idea. You have a very pretty looking truck there. I'd leave the front alone and use the stock bumper and possibly integrate it into the rear bumper area. If you don't have any, you could use the parking lights as back-up lights. Norman also has a good point, it almost makes it look like a cabover nose, too tall.
I agree. By itself I think there's too much "cat's eye" openings going on. Makes the front end look too "busy". But it's your truck, do what you pleases you. Please don't ruin the original hood... As Brad said they are HARD to find!
I happen to like the 60 style trucks. Everyone puts a 64 hood on them And to Me it's wrong. A 60 Looks like a 60. Posted using the Full Custom H.A.M.B. App!
I don't think it would compliment the existing lines of the truck at all. The stock hoods on these are already a little on the extreme side, so doubling up the eyelets just seems gratuitous to me. They would be better used on the rear. Maybe molded in vertically for tail light on a fleet side? Posted using the Full Custom H.A.M.B. App!