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05-07-2009, 01:50 PM | #51 | |
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Location: Millington Tn.
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
Quote:
Ron, All I was trying to say was sometimes a long explanation like Joe was giving is a lot better than a short one to folks who are new to working on these trucks. And I don't think I said you gave incorrect information.
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David, Daughters 66 truck: http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=484601 Learning to drive a 3 on the tree: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcCMvRgBo1Q |
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05-07-2009, 02:23 PM | #52 | |
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Location: Sidney,b.c.
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
Quote:
1st- I was replying to the question given. if you have a question about it or something that you do not understand then all you have to do is ask. only by posing your concerns will the topic expand. you cannot expect someone to write a book for every question --------------------- But when folks ask questions about a motor vehicle that may be someday traveling in front of you and/or your family someday on the interstate I'm sure you would want thta rig to be safe, I know I would and it's folks like Joe and others here who help us out and make sure we do our builds correct. after all it's their reputation on the line if someone gets hurt from some incorrect information. 4dranch- one should not take any info given on these sites as gospel. there is so much misinformation . all that you can do is asimilate all the information that you can on a subject and figure if it can do you any good and apply at your own risk now about the incorrect information "I know I would and it's folks like Joe and others here who help us out and make sure we do our builds correct. after all it's their reputation on the line if someone gets hurt from some incorrect information.". so here you are saying that I am not helping and inferring that I give incorrect information that is what your statement says to me I don't have to be here ron |
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05-07-2009, 02:30 PM | #53 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Millington Tn.
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
Okay Thanks Ron.
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David, Daughters 66 truck: http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=484601 Learning to drive a 3 on the tree: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcCMvRgBo1Q |
05-07-2009, 06:29 PM | #54 |
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Location: Columbus, OH
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
Ron, the lengthy explanation a few posts back on page 2 really answered a lot of questions. First off, I had no idea that the panels didn't have the standard p/u bed wood! I thought someone just replaced it with plywood and that it was not properly done!
Secondly, I think mine is 3/4" oak plywood. You say it's two pieces of half inch? Two pieces stacked? or did you just mean a left piece and a right piece? One layer of 1/2" seems pretty flimsy for a floor to me. If it is supposed to be half inch, and I have 3/4", that is another big problem that I'll have to deal with. Also, the previous owner did apparent;y replace the bed wood. It was refinished top and bottom, even in places that you could not get to without taking it off. Also, everything under the bed wood was stripped and painted nicely at the time, where under the cab and forward are still factory finish and some rust here and there... You can tell the stuff was painted from above with the wood out. I also had no idea how incredibly hard it was to remove the bed wood! I should plan on an entire saturday to do th is project then, and keep my Sunday free just in case. I got your dimensions and all from the GMC forum. The ones from Harmon's that I posted for 73-80 Blazers do not list any dimensions, that is why I posted them (as they may possibly be of help to us 60-66 guys, but not sure). I sensed that you were a little upset about something in your reply to that, and I took slight offense, as I didn't understand why you were being short with me, as I was posting separate questions and info from what you had told me. Sorry if I somehow confused you. Your answers on the GMC V6 list solved some of my questions, but I have more as well, which I asked on here, and you apparently had thought to have already answered those questions. I still don't know the dimensions of these blazer units, but they look fairly similar. I know you posted about the 67-68 Suburban mounts, and said the 69-72 were slightly different, but you did not know the dimensions. The ones I then brought up were not 67-72, nor suburban, they were blazer mounts 73-80, which I don't think had been discussed at all on either site yet (unless I didn't receive my daily digest email on the GMC stuff somewhere along the line). I worked under my truck a lot last night, and had the gas tank out. I tried to pull a string as best as I could, and the frame does not appear bent down in the rear, and I also visually inspected the frame, and there were no signs anywhere of any disfiguration or stretching, stress, crinkles, etc. In fact, the beefiest part of the rear frame is the section about 16" back from the axle. I spent a lot of time cleaning out a hundred or two acorns out of there with the tank out last night! Thick metal, double "C" welded together to form a box. I definitely agree that it would take A LOT to bend that.
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Chuck in Ohio *1962 GMC 1000 Panel Truck - 305D/Saginaw 4sp soon: 351C V6 + AX15 5sp OD trans, & 75-87/91 disc brake front end *1988 Suzuki Samurai 4x4 project, VW 1.9L mTDI, Toyota R151F transmission & Toyota full floater axles, LWB body tub stretch project *Many 1977-1979 Suzuki GS motorcycles, Kawasaki KDX220R, '77 Suzuki PE250, etc |
05-07-2009, 07:02 PM | #55 | |
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
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I sure as heck wish the previous owner(s) would have done this right, and also replaced the body mounts when they had it apart! They left the body mounts there, but left the bolts completely out of the two sets of rubber mounts on the cross sills, and put the bed wood back on! Some people!!! Why!>??!?!?! So I am missing all the lower rubber mounts under the cross sills, and 3 of the uppers managed to stay with the truck, but one took a hike down the road somewhere. Add that to the list of 200+ other stupid things I have had to fix due to the previous owner's "runs good, partially restored" description! meant "barely runs, help bail us out of this mess!"
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Chuck in Ohio *1962 GMC 1000 Panel Truck - 305D/Saginaw 4sp soon: 351C V6 + AX15 5sp OD trans, & 75-87/91 disc brake front end *1988 Suzuki Samurai 4x4 project, VW 1.9L mTDI, Toyota R151F transmission & Toyota full floater axles, LWB body tub stretch project *Many 1977-1979 Suzuki GS motorcycles, Kawasaki KDX220R, '77 Suzuki PE250, etc Last edited by Chuck78; 05-07-2009 at 07:05 PM. |
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05-07-2009, 07:30 PM | #56 |
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
the floors are painted originally.
the split in the floor is from front to back, up the middle. the plywood is 3/4" thick The discrepencythat I see in all of this is if the prev owner went through the trouble of replacing the floor and painting it all up and such; why did he leave old worn out insulators in there. now you will find out when you go to remove the bolts, esp the ones on either that go upwards into the body as to how they come out. if they hav e been out before than it shouldn't be to bad. why do you want to take it out. if you are just going to change the insulators the only time that you have to touch the floor is to take out the long stovebolts that go down through the mount. you will just have to raise the cross sills from the bottom sides to change the mounts. the small cross sill that just mounts to the floor will have adequate clearance once you replace the mounts unless that there are rust problem with the body sections. I do have a spare floor that is sitting out.if any one wants to see a picture of one out. I am also fortunate to have about 20 good insulators. I pulled all this stuff from my ambulance when I parted it out.it only had 67,000 mi. the floor was all covered over.the wear strips still look like new,like the inner fender tubs; they were never touched(still bright new metal) the only problem that I have seen with the floors is that the metal around them goes bad first ron Lewis Matkin who is on the 6066gmc board frequently is a wonderful source of information .his dad did own a gm dealership in the day. Lewis does have all the parts books and understands them quite well Last edited by padresag; 05-07-2009 at 07:34 PM. |
05-08-2009, 08:12 AM | #57 | ||
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
Quote:
Quote:
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05-08-2009, 09:25 AM | #58 |
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
I think that would be an accurate assessment joe
ron Last edited by padresag; 05-08-2009 at 09:26 AM. |
05-13-2009, 04:57 PM | #59 |
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Location: Columbus, OH
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
Today I got my "67-72" Suburban body mount bushing set from Bob's Chevy Truck Parts. Not sure that I can use the cab mounts, but the bed mounts are what I was after, and $200 for something that is almost the same was my only option!
Got the calipers on them, and they measure about .745" to .760" thickness (some variance). Outside dimensions are identical. My old ones were so rotted that they were squashed down to about .520". It was stated earlier on here that the originals were .720" thickness. The big difference is that the hole in the center is MUCH larger. The old ones were about .437" in the steel plate and about .750" in the rubber. The 67-72 style are .770" in the steel plate, and 1.028" in the rubber. It's pouring down rain right now, but I'll take a look later on and see what it looks like this will mean for mounting them up.
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Chuck in Ohio *1962 GMC 1000 Panel Truck - 305D/Saginaw 4sp soon: 351C V6 + AX15 5sp OD trans, & 75-87/91 disc brake front end *1988 Suzuki Samurai 4x4 project, VW 1.9L mTDI, Toyota R151F transmission & Toyota full floater axles, LWB body tub stretch project *Many 1977-1979 Suzuki GS motorcycles, Kawasaki KDX220R, '77 Suzuki PE250, etc |
05-13-2009, 05:24 PM | #60 | |
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Re: GOOD NEWS!!!! Problem solved!
Quote:
The 73-80 blazer mounts look to be slightly smaller maybe, but have the smaller hole. No idea on thickness, but maybe Harmon's would give you a dimension of you contacted them. As it looks, the raised rubber flange on these 67-72 mounts probably fits in a hole on the frame which is larger than the 60-66 frames, so this will probably need trimmed off. Then I could just insert a 1" rubber hose in there to make up the difference. The inner metal tubular sleeve might be a slight issue, but I'm not quite sure on it's length/depth and what purpose it served. I don't imagine you would want a metal sleeve sandwiched between the metal plates that the rubbers are molded to, because if you had them in there like that, and not floating, then you would have a rigid mount with a large block of rubber around it. So I think Maybe the rubber hose with a metal sleeve in the middle section of it where it goes through the frame might be enough. Gotta run to Napa asap and pick up my rear engine (bellhousing) mounts that are in , $7 each! Also a front wheel cylinder. Can't believe how much they have in stock in their local warehouse, being that those wheel cylinders were last used on a 1963 front drum brake truck! wow. RockAuto.com was so cheap though that they were the same price before tax with next day express shipping. EDIT - no time to re-read the rest here at the moment, but maybe the metal sleeves are only in the bottom mount? And then they protrude enough into the upper mount to firmly locate the raised rubber section between the inside of the frame hole and the bolt??? This makes sense to me now. I can make this work no problem. Just need some rubber hose and replace some missing sleeves with some similar tubing or pipe.
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Chuck in Ohio *1962 GMC 1000 Panel Truck - 305D/Saginaw 4sp soon: 351C V6 + AX15 5sp OD trans, & 75-87/91 disc brake front end *1988 Suzuki Samurai 4x4 project, VW 1.9L mTDI, Toyota R151F transmission & Toyota full floater axles, LWB body tub stretch project *Many 1977-1979 Suzuki GS motorcycles, Kawasaki KDX220R, '77 Suzuki PE250, etc Last edited by Chuck78; 05-13-2009 at 05:27 PM. |
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05-13-2009, 05:59 PM | #61 |
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Re: bed mount question - bent frame from towing?
much to my surprise, I went out in the rain and looked, and the two sets of bushings to the front actually share the same large frame hole as the new ones I just got. The one I was measuring from was one of the two sets that sits over the frame mounted gas tank, and this one is the smaller dimension hole that I gave. My truck is a 62. Maybe they were different for 60-62 panels as well? Lewis stated to Ron that he gave dimensions for the 64-66. Sorry for so many posts. When I get this all figured out, I'll post back with results or more info.
Also, picked up my rear engine mounts (under bellhousing to xmember) for my 62 manual trans truck, and noticed in the NAPA catalog part # 602-1041 in the engine, trans, etc mounting bushing section. This part # looks very similar to a suburban/panel bed mount, but none in stock to check dimensions. Used as upper motor mounts on ford trucks and transmission mounts in Cosworth Vegas, among other possible applications.
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Chuck in Ohio *1962 GMC 1000 Panel Truck - 305D/Saginaw 4sp soon: 351C V6 + AX15 5sp OD trans, & 75-87/91 disc brake front end *1988 Suzuki Samurai 4x4 project, VW 1.9L mTDI, Toyota R151F transmission & Toyota full floater axles, LWB body tub stretch project *Many 1977-1979 Suzuki GS motorcycles, Kawasaki KDX220R, '77 Suzuki PE250, etc |
02-02-2013, 09:39 AM | #62 | |
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Re: GOOD NEWS!!!! Problem solved!
Quote:
On Jan 28, 2013, at 11:44 AM, GMCPauls Truck Parts <robbinspd1199@yahoo.com> wrote: Hi, Roy To date only the 1967-72 Suburban / Panel body mounts have been made. The manufacturer has been satisfied with the demand but they still have not begun tooling up to make the 60-66 versions which are smaller in size as you are aware. Sorry we couldn't help with this!! My Very Best Sky @ GMCPauls Online Catalog- http://www.gmcpauls.com GMCPauls Truck Parts 505 Adams Drive Rockville, IN 47872 Fax: 773-442-0103 ========================================
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