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Projects Project Mattitude: the Beginning

Discussion in 'Traditional Hot Rods' started by TexasSpeed, May 31, 2011.

  1. Tuck
    Joined: May 14, 2001
    Posts: 5,841

    Tuck
    Tech Editor
    from MINNESOTA
    1. Early Hemi Tech

    looking great Matt- Keep going----->
     
  2. In response to your modification on that steering box...

    Can you just use a regular welder to put a new flange on that?

    I thought the case might be cast?

    Could be wrong...
     
  3. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Thanks, Tuck!

    Good question.. I think the cases are cast, yes. I actually need to ask Neil about that or someone who's done this before if welding the flange to the case is possible with a MIG. In Neil's thread, he mentions heating up the case before welding to prevent cracking the case. I can't tell in the pictures if they're MIG or TIG welds however.

    Here's Neil's thread for reference..

    http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=764115
     
  4. farmer12
    Joined: Aug 28, 2006
    Posts: 7,717

    farmer12
    Member

    Go Matt, go! Looking good!
     
  5. Tuck
    Joined: May 14, 2001
    Posts: 5,841

    Tuck
    Tech Editor
    from MINNESOTA
    1. Early Hemi Tech

    They are cast- you can weld it. You heat it up red hot and use mig wire- let it cool slow- then come back and heat it up red hot again to remove the tension and then let it cool... then you're good.

    I cut my flange off but I used a flat U bolt and a C-notch to hold the box in place in the frame rail. It just so happened that it placed the box at a mid point in the frame to clear the starter/pedals/clutch so that was my solution.

    [​IMG]
    (you can see this one I didnt remove as much of the flange and brought it down to match a flathead engine mount washer that I drilled with some acrylic behind it-

    The first one went with the fire- the second one I'm actually working on today- and came back to look at Matts box because I was debating weather to take off that extra casting on the end of the box that used to support the flange. Its not needed but maybe ascetically?

    [​IMG]

    I was looking at it like visually- you have the U bolt band that has a thickness- then the extra lip at the end of the box that has a thickness... and then the Pitman arm- so its grouped in "3" which I'm afraid if I grind it smooth like Matts it'll lose that relationship-

    But looking at the way Matt pruned it I LIKE IT... so I'm torn.


    The idea with the U-bolt is that when its torqued down you have 360 degrees of contact- like a bicycle post- once its tight it wont move... ever.... and its adjustable! ;-)
     
  6. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Tuck - Great stuff! I wish I had thought of that. I like the look of the stepped area on the end of the shaft, but since I want it to bolt through the frame, it had to come down. Not to mention, the flanges I got from Neil will need to be able to slide over it so I can weld it on there.

    Will I need to heat the box for tack welds? Or can I tack weld it cold maybe three times to get it in position so it doesn't move around while final welding?
     
  7. JRussell
    Joined: Nov 21, 2003
    Posts: 491

    JRussell
    Member

    Your 28 is killer man!!!!
     
  8. pasadenahotrod
    Joined: Feb 13, 2007
    Posts: 11,775

    pasadenahotrod
    Member
    from Texas

    Always replace the water pump on an engine you don't know the of before installing the engine and getting down the road. It is cheap insurance to avoid a roadside replacement.
    Always a good idea to pull the pan on a "rebuilt" engine pop a rod cap or two and a main and check bearing wear. Maybe even replace the oil pump too. All cheap insurance.
     
  9. Tuck
    Joined: May 14, 2001
    Posts: 5,841

    Tuck
    Tech Editor
    from MINNESOTA
    1. Early Hemi Tech

    you should heat for tack welds...
    -because you'll tack weld it... it'll hold until you bump it and the tacks will break right when you're ready to weld... my experience anyway.
     
  10. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Thanks! I wish I worked as fast as you and your friends. :p

    When I get a running engine, I'll be doing all of these.. Until then, I'll be checking the classifieds often for one. :eek:

    Duly noted. Thanks!


    Posted from the TJJ App for iPhone & iPad
     
  11. 29ToyA
    Joined: Oct 29, 2010
    Posts: 413

    29ToyA
    Member

    Great project!

    I really like what you did to the cowl.
     
    Last edited: Apr 22, 2013
  12. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Thanks, man! Still a long ways to go with the cowl..
     
  13. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Well, now that I've gotten a lot of schoolwork done for the semester and only have a few projects left which I can finish in time for finals next week.. I had some free time in between here and there and I spent some time getting ready to tackle the steering box placement. Here are some shots from doing that.

    Oh, and I finally figured out how to take good pictures in low-light situations and at night. Had I known that, my mini-bike shots from LSRU would have turned out much better! No biggie, it only took me about 2 years to figure that out.. Haha. :rolleyes:

    First off, Neil (Candy Man) was gracious enough to make me the flanges I need to get my box mounted out of 3/8" steel. It took some reshaping of one to get it to bolt on the inside of the frame but it worked out great. Thanks Neil!

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    I'm going to have to ground out the inside of the large hole at an angle to get the F1 box to slide in and be straight in relation to the steering arm as well as center the steering column in the cockpit.

    Then I assembled the F1 box with the early Ford mast jacket I picked up at Antique Auto Supply in Arlington at the start of this month. The column drop is a 1936 Ford that I picked off here. It's been shortened a little and the welds aren't ground down but I'll get to that once everything has been sorted out.

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    I'll be using the stock F1 steering wheel to mock it up as the F1 wheel is the same diameter of the '52 Packard wheel I picked up off here as well.

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Apr 29, 2013
  14. mastergun1980
    Joined: Oct 18, 2010
    Posts: 1,094

    mastergun1980
    Member
    from Alva OK

    I really admire the way you can button down and stick to one project....
     
  15. Looking good brutha! That Packard wheel is the business!
     
  16. Anderson
    Joined: Jan 27, 2003
    Posts: 7,454

    Anderson
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Is that Packard wheel splined or tapered with a keyway?
     
  17. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Splined, unfortunately. The splined hole is larger than the F1 shaft too, so I'll have to look into what it will take to make it work.
     
  18. Six Ball
    Joined: Oct 8, 2007
    Posts: 6,365

    Six Ball
    Member
    from Nevada

    You are the guy who can take a hunk of a Ford steering wheel and build an adapter for the Packard wheel. Great choice by the way.
     
  19. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Eh.. When you're stuck without something cool to drive to car shows, you're motivated to do that. :)

    Thanks! As soon as I saw the wheel, I knew it was the one for the roadster. I wanted something different from the normal '40 wheel.

    I thought about that. I'm thinking I could smooth out the inside of the Packard wheel then take the splined section of the F1 wheel, turn it down to where it's small enough to fit in there, and make a key for between the Packard wheel, the "F1 adapter", and the F1 steering shaft and use a big thick washer with the nut off the F1 shaft to hold it all down on there.

    I'll have to be extremely careful to make sure it's all perfectly round so that my steering wheel doesn't move side-to-side when I turn it. I'll probably try to find a guy with a lathe so I can do all of this.

    Is that how any of you guys would do it? Any ideas or input on this?

    I'll also have to make a bigger "collar" for between the mast jacket and the Packard wheel. It's a good inch or so larger than the center of a '40 wheel.
     
  20. Stormin' Norman1
    Joined: Jan 15, 2009
    Posts: 134

    Stormin' Norman1
    Member

    Great progress on your coupster project. Like to follow along and see how it's progressing. Thanks for sharing.
     
  21. austinhunt
    Joined: Nov 26, 2011
    Posts: 533

    austinhunt
    Member

    Good lookin wheel. And your pictures are always really nice to look at.
     
  22. tmfcracing
    Joined: Feb 25, 2009
    Posts: 984

    tmfcracing
    Member
    from Sweden

    Matt, love your project. Keep it up Mate.
     
  23. QuarterLifeCrisis
    Joined: Aug 6, 2011
    Posts: 135

    QuarterLifeCrisis
    Member
    from NY

    Is a 52 packard steering column something obtainable? I bet you can find one on here pretty easily. That seems like it would be the easiest route if I were to adapt that wheel to fit. Remove the splined shaft from the packard column and weld it to the column you're using.
     
  24. Tuck
    Joined: May 14, 2001
    Posts: 5,841

    Tuck
    Tech Editor
    from MINNESOTA
    1. Early Hemi Tech

    dig the steering wheel- looking great man! :)
     
  25. I think you are actually getting a lot done for a person in school.
    All these great details are going to make for an epic car.
     
  26. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    That's something that I could do. The rubber bushing at the top of the mast jacket would have to get "bored" out for the Packard shaft to fit through it but it's definitely all doable.
     
  27. hillbilly4008
    Joined: Feb 13, 2009
    Posts: 2,924

    hillbilly4008
    Member
    from Rome NY

    What this guy said^

    This is exactly how I did one of mine. Willys Jeep Ross steering box flipped upside down, '46 Ford truck mast, and 1953 Nash Ambassador steering wheel. Cut the Willys shaft, cut the shaft out of the Nash when I stole the wheel, butt welded the two pieces together, done.
     
  28. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Some of you may have seen the thread my friend, JJK, started for me.. If you missed it, I'm officially a graduate of West Texas A&M University. Which can only mean one thing..

    No more homework to infere with my hot rod build. :D

    Unfortunately, I had to spend the better part of my day working on my daily driver performing routine maintenance.. On the bright side, I finally taught myself how to change pads on disc brakes. :) I can change drum brakes like a champ thanks to driving a beater C10 daily growing up, but I never got around to disc brakes until today. Modern junk. :D By the time I was done, sunset was less than a hour away.

    Then I decided, the hell with it, the neighbors can call the cops if they want.. I busted out the grinder and went to town. As a result, my steering box now fits into the frame. After finally getting the box to slide through and fit where the end of the pitman shaft is straight, I sat in the roadster and made sure the wheel was not too high, too low, or off to the side too much. There's enough room to turn the wheel without skinning my fingers on the door. I still need to shorten the jacket a little more which will move the wheel forward a little more which will let me put the nut on the end of the shaft to hold the wheel in place.

    (yes.. I am aware the C-clamp fell off in the second picture)

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    I left everything tacked in for a reason.. I suspected I might have to rethink my wishbone mounting. It doesn't look like the arm will be able to clear the wishbone so I may have to mount the wishbones off a bracket on the bottom of the frame. But doing that will solve my caster issue as well. The top of both kingpins sit at 4.5 degrees but I want a little more just to be safe and I think moving the 'bones down underneath the frame will resolve that.

    [​IMG]

    But I'm glad I got to squeeze in a few hours of garage time before taking off for my "stay-cation" at my brother's in Fort Worth in a couple days.
     
  29. Six Ball
    Joined: Oct 8, 2007
    Posts: 6,365

    Six Ball
    Member
    from Nevada

    Congratulations on your graduation. Several of my family members have graduated from that school under it's many historic names but none of them built a cool rod while they did it. :cool: The steering looks good. Are you going to use the switch on the column? I always liked those. They were so Ford!
     
  30. TexasSpeed
    Joined: Nov 2, 2009
    Posts: 4,631

    TexasSpeed
    Member
    from Texas

    Thanks! :cool:

    Yes, I'll be putting the switch on the column drop to good use.. That is precisely why I bought it. I think anything else would look out of place. :)
     

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