11-23-2008, 12:35 PM | #1 |
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is c-notch necessary?
Hi there,
I want to static drop my truck as much as I can without cutting into the bed. I had done this on a newer chevy truck years back, and a mini-c notch was required to get the diff pumpkin right up tight to the inside of the bed floor. This is as low as you can go using the stock rear end without cutting the bed. I assumed this would be the same case with my 66 GMC. But once I had the bed off and started measuring things it looks like with no c notch, I can get the diff pumpkin within 1/4" of the bottom of the bed. I have the stock dana 44 rear end that came in these GMCs. This may have to do with the fact it is a GMC and has leaf springs and a dana 44 instead of trailing arms and coils with a 10 bolt rear. But I see no reason to c notch it unless I want to be pounding the bottom of my bed wood with my differential or plan to cut out a hole in the bed. If I was going to cut a hole in the bed I would do a full-on large c notch. Can the others who have done under the bed mini-c notches verify whether or not they had the same experience? Thanks, Dan |
11-23-2008, 12:51 PM | #2 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
My 68 had a wood floor w/the bolt-in style c-notch from CPP & the rear frames are the same as the 63-66's. The 12-bolts pumpkin hit the bed floor if the air was too low in the rear or there was too much weight (cargo). I don't/didn't play w/my pressure settings so basically my system was 'static' or fixed @ a constant ride height which equalled about 7-8" of drop in the rear. I only adjusted the air pressure when using the truck as a truck (cargo, towing a trailer, etc...).
Not using the c-notch would almost garantee no damage to the bed floor.
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11-23-2008, 01:35 PM | #3 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
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vinnie 1960 chevy c10 frame with a 1966 cab 2002 dodge intrepid r/t 2004 chevy 2500 4 door short bed |
11-23-2008, 01:37 PM | #4 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Thanks, good info. As soon as it warms up this morning I'm going to bolt everything up.
I cut everything off my axle and smoothed it yesterday. I flipped it to the top of the leafs. Today I'm going to set the pinion angle, weld the perches, and bolt everything up and see where I stand. I'll take some more measurements and decide if I want to do the notch or not. I will be close to the axle/frame hitting after the flip because my leaf springs are sagging so much. I might decide to put overload bags in just because it is cheaper than new leafs, and the adjustability means I don't have to engineer the ride heights as carefully. PS: I'll go take some pics right now. |
11-23-2008, 01:56 PM | #5 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Here are the pictures. On my second measurement, it looks like my axle will hit my frame when the top of the diff is 3/4" or so from the bottom of the bed wood. Maybe I could benefit from a 3/4" or so notch? It's just a lot of work to get that extra 3/4" before my pumpkin hits the bed.
Tough call for me to make. Thanks, Dan |
11-23-2008, 02:02 PM | #6 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
you could always put some bump stops on the frame so the diff wont hit the bed. looks good
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vinnie 1960 chevy c10 frame with a 1966 cab 2002 dodge intrepid r/t 2004 chevy 2500 4 door short bed |
11-23-2008, 02:18 PM | #7 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Here is my 'burb without a notch...pumpkin doesnt hit.
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11-23-2008, 02:18 PM | #8 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Sorry. heres pic.
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11-23-2008, 02:32 PM | #9 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
protrash64,
do you have any pictures of how low your burb sits? Thanks, Dan |
11-23-2008, 02:40 PM | #10 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
My 65 chevy sits on the bumpstops now that are trimed in half and I have about 3\4" between axle and frame and that is about what I have from the top of the diff to the bottom of my wood floor so I plan on bagging and using a 1/2" shorter bumpstop so when its laid out at a show or something its not hittimg the bottom of the floor or if I have a bag faliure or something I could limp some where to fix. I'm not going to run a notch because I won't gain anything unless I move my floor up.
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11-23-2008, 02:50 PM | #11 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Heres the only pic I can find right now but this is sitting on a trimmed stock bumpstop about 3/4 from frame above axle.
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11-23-2008, 05:13 PM | #12 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Heres a shot of it sitting down....29" tires.(275/45/20)
My pick-up has the same frame as yours with leafs and flip kit. Its as low as the burb when they sit next to each other. I have a step notch in the frame so nothing hits/bottoms. Its pretty low, although the pics dont look it. Ive never had anybody ask if it was 4x4!!!
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11-23-2008, 09:08 PM | #13 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
dan
did you get ever thing welded up on your truck?
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vinnie 1960 chevy c10 frame with a 1966 cab 2002 dodge intrepid r/t 2004 chevy 2500 4 door short bed |
11-23-2008, 09:13 PM | #14 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Thanks for all your info.
I bolted everything up and set it down on the ground today. The axle is 1.5" or so from the frame, and when I stand on the back bumper the axle hits the frame. With the axle hitting the frame, the diff is 1/2-3/4" from where the bed wood will sit. I kind of wish it was right at the bed wood, but I'm not going to c-notch it to get a fraction of an inch lower! I still need to weld the perches to the frame. I want to research pinion angles, and buy an angle finder so I get the pinion angle as good as I can. I like the clean and simple way I have done the axle flip more than the bolt-in flip kits. It is cheaper, too. Those spring perches were $9 for the pair at the trailer shop, and were nearly identical to the $40 ones at the hot rod shop. I had the U bolts made, and they will have to be trimmed. I made the plates for the bottom of the axle out of 1/4" plate. So when I bolt the bed on, the axle will be hitting the frame hard. I need some way to bring it back up. I am going to install air bags to bring it back up and give me hauling abilities. I have some premade bottom plates. I will make tabs to connect them to the axle housing. Then I will make the top plates out of 1/4" plate and gusset them to the frame. They will end up looking something like these: http://www.*****************/files/Re...ingle_Port.jpg. I think I should make them instead of buy them since the frame is shaped crazy on these year trucks. Here's pictures so far: |
11-23-2008, 09:42 PM | #15 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Really clean truck you are working on. Keep us posted on your progress!
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11-23-2008, 09:45 PM | #16 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
I used to have an S-10 that would bottom out and I added some load bags on the leafs. They acted like big bumpstops and I never bottomed with no air. I could pump them up and carry stuff back from the Depot!
Are you measuring from the top of the frame? I think the wood mite be higher due to the mount strips....I have no bed floor so I dont know exactly. Nice getting stuff done for less dollars too.......nice job. Gotta drag that bed back on to see what its going to look like.
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11-23-2008, 09:56 PM | #17 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Those bags and plates look familiar.
Looks good Dan. Just make sure you can get the U-bolts back off when you make the bag brackets on the axle. Here is the U-Joint article I was talking about earlier. http://www.airridetalk.com/articles/...nt-enigma.html
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11-23-2008, 10:13 PM | #18 | |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
What you described with your S-10 sounds like what I'm after. Except I'll probably keep some pressure in them at all times.
Before I took the bed off I crawled my ass under the truck and the bed wood was sitting directly on the top of the frame at the section over the axle. Everywhere else it is sitting on crossmembers, but over the axle is the high point of the frame, and the wood sits right on it. I'll probably set the pinion angle and weld the perches next weekend, and finish the bags and put the bed on the weekend after that. Thanksgiving and all is going to slow me down a bit. I can't wait to see how it looks and go haul ass down the road myself.. Quote:
Last edited by danieljpeter; 11-23-2008 at 11:14 PM. Reason: typo |
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11-23-2008, 10:16 PM | #19 | |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Hahhaha. Yeah, I think if I mount the bag plates 1" or so from the axle housing I will be okay. If I remove all the hardware and the u bolt plate from the bottom I should be able to rotate the u bolt 90 degress and slide it out. I will double check this works before welding anything.
I have made some classic mistakes in my day, so I appreciate you looking out. Thanks! Quote:
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11-24-2008, 12:13 AM | #20 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
dan
i'm pretty close to you and i have a angle finder 2 types one you dial in and and with a needle. if you need to borrow i can bring out one day. that way your not spending money on some thing you are not probly goning to use again for a long time. vinnie
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12-16-2008, 11:27 PM | #21 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
I know how you guys like pictures and all. I've been working a lot lately, haven't had a lot of time to work on the truck. But I will probably slap it back together and drive it around this weekend.
This is just supposed to be a low budget, functional, lowered truck. Wanted it to be as low as possible without cutting into the bed. The bags are just to get the ride height correct and to be able to haul, not for hitting switches or hopping or anything. Here are the bag brackets. I bought the bottom plates, and made axle tabs for them. I made the top plates from 1/4" steel. I like using the all-thread to hold the plates where they need to be. You set them to where the bag would be collapsed (3" for slams) and everything works out good. I couldn't make the triangle gussets as big as I wanted, because they would hit the bag. I didn't like having just plain old 1/4" cantilevered out so far with the bag mounted to it. It probably would have been okay, but I wanted to stiffen it up a bit. I got some 1/2" square solid stock and put a piece of either side of the top of the bracket. This will also keep the bed wood from pressing down on the air fitting once installed. (continued...) |
12-16-2008, 11:29 PM | #22 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
(...resumed...)
Flat black paint. The driveline was hitting the top of the hole in the crossmemeber it passed through. I cut out all of the metal except for the top most piece of metal. Then I made a 3/8" steel plate and bent it and welded it on top to restore some integrity: So I just need to find some shorter shocks and set up the shock mounts so they act as a droop limiter. So when I jack the thing up by the frame it doesn't try and tear the bags apart. Then I'll probably drive it until january and start my tranny swap then. I miss driving it too much to do all the work at once. I have a rebuilt sm465 with cast iron bellhousing all painted up and ready to swap in. Thanks for your help. |
12-16-2008, 11:53 PM | #23 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Damn Dan, nice work. That's a clean bag mount.
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12-16-2008, 11:56 PM | #24 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Nothing too fancy. I don't stress over making **** all perfect like you.
It should be strong enough, eh? I'm trying to break the habit of building **** too heavy and making boat anchors out of everything I do. |
12-17-2008, 12:17 AM | #25 |
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Re: is c-notch necessary?
Nice to see an update.....nice work too. Thats a good tip on using the all-thread for adjusting stuff. I think it would be handy in a bunch of different places.
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