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03-13-2024, 05:12 PM | #2276 |
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Rochester, KENT
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Re: GRIZZ’s ‘79 - 2WD BLAZER Challenge over in London, England. “~It’s not a Project
This morning I got up, fed George and took a walk down the garden to my carport.
What greeted me brought a great smile to my heart and face. I love the stance on the woody. The rest of the day was spent running around, post office, phone calls and cleaning the floor in the second half of the garage Unpacking the first shelf, I found new parts for the C10 bought in 2015 from amongst others LMC in Kansas City and other places, never unpacked. Loads more to get done, cleaning, sorting, mental inventory. More later. Feeling like the Mojo is returning at last.
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MY BUILD LINK: http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...585901]Redneck Express - 1966 C10 Short Fleetside MY USA ROADTRIPS http://forum.retro-rides.org/thread/...2018-humdinger IF YOU CAN'T FIX IT WITH A HAMMER, YOU'VE GOT AN ELECTRICAL PROBLEM MATE. |
03-14-2024, 04:25 AM | #2277 |
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Rochester, KENT
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Re: GRIZZ’s ‘79 - 2WD BLAZER Challenge over in London, England. “~It’s not a Project
So another
So another day of being kept busy by loads of things. Post office runs, hour long phone calls with friends about how quiet the job market is in our industry. Listing more stuff on Marketplace and responding to dumbass questions. So I really only got going after lunch sometime. First job was clearing and cleaning the floor in the other part of the garage. That part nobody sees. The 5’ Drill press table and surrounding floor took quite some time as the garage vacuum hose (retired 20 years ago from household tasks) kept getting blocked at various junctions by the challenge of swarf and junk going up it. Next job was to start cleaning shelves on more of my storage. I have brand new truck parts, bought and collected from LMC in Kansas City, Oklahoma City and other places across the USA that are still as I had unpacked them from my baggage in 2015 Some of the biodegradable plastic bags had completely decomposed leaving piles of parts that needed vacuum cleaning. Sorting them at the same time. This all takes time. But I have found a lot of treasures. I never completed the unpacking and mental inventory but it feels good, seeing stuff that will be drawn into service as the C10 restoration starts to take off again. I am not sure which set of badges I will be using in this build. Being a 1966 C10, Custom Cab V8 there are obviously the original versions but this is no true 100 point restoration, rather an aesthetically pleasing (TO ME, FOR MY PLEASURE ) rebuild with custom touches that appeal to me. As always, all input, comments, advice, donations, parts, cash, drugs, help, visits to Grizz’s Garage where Grizz’s Sh17s happens are welcome and encouraged. It gets lonely down there. Speaking of lonely…… Sally had eventually capitulated and bought herself the largest twin port Air Frier ( I still have no clue how they actually work) So she offered to do marinated chicken skewers/kebabs for us and brought them over with Pita Pockets. A bit like Meals on Wheels. Food was good and she left by 18.45 which saw me headed down to the garage again. Having been indoors for a bit, I didn’t enjoy the cold of the garage and decided not to carry on with cleaning up. Rather to reward myself with some “Hobby Time” So I went to the wood store and found a 800mm length of oak. Brought it back in and got going making another name plate or board for my shop. I had collected the parts a few years ago. Lack of mojo precluded completion. Now it felt good. Small rewards. Just to clarify for all the wordsmiths, linguists and spelling police out there…… The name encompasses the good, bad and ugly that happens or is part of my shop. So Dennis always brings and collects for me, license plates at his bodyshop. Once I got to a critical mass of Missouri State plates I could go at them with tin snips and cut out letters and numbers that gave me what I needed. I had also rediscovered some the aluminium castings from Andy near Terlton in Oklahoma, one of my favourite places to visit on road trips. They have been mounted on the archway down the drive, outside the shop. While doing the layout I really wanted to incorporate one of my favourite brands. And a small road trip memento. Assembly was pretty quick with one screw up ( in my mind at least, can you see it in the final product?) and I still need to decide where and how to mount it. Hanging from a chain, rope, propped up or screwed down. Not yet sure. By 19.45 it was completed and I looked around, satisfied that there was actually progress again. TOUCH SOMETHING. MOVE SOMETHING. DO SOMETHING. ITS ALL PROGRESS. RESULT In the end I decided not to use this piece, from Andy’s foundry yet. Today I will look for an appropriate place for it. Possibly on the Chevy Tailgate bench up at the house, on the deck, where friends often congregate for a BBQ in summer. Or possibly on the wooden arch to the shop area. This is starting to feel like progress and success to me. Like the MoJo is coming back bit by bit. Long may it continue. Life is good.
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MY BUILD LINK: http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...585901]Redneck Express - 1966 C10 Short Fleetside MY USA ROADTRIPS http://forum.retro-rides.org/thread/...2018-humdinger IF YOU CAN'T FIX IT WITH A HAMMER, YOU'VE GOT AN ELECTRICAL PROBLEM MATE. |
03-15-2024, 07:36 AM | #2278 |
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Rochester, KENT
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Re: GRIZZ’s ‘79 - 2WD BLAZER Challenge over in London, England. “~It’s not a Project
And yesterday was a great day.
I mounted my new shop sign above the small door, and mounted the Bull**** Corner sign on the tailgate bench I made. Met a great guy who is a builder, runs a wedding car hire business on the side. Bought some traffic lights off me that I have owned 10 years. Sold the other one years ago for what both cost me. Never mounted them as they turned out to too large. He had just bought a white black cab to add to his fleet. @£350 for a days hire, it seems like good business. Later I kept unpacking one of my tool sheds, engine stands, cherry picker, can and body mounts live in there. Discovered some road signs that I used to have up before COVID came and the carport got built. Thought I would list them as a joblot on marketplace and see if anyone grabbed them. They were all found in ditches, roadsides and some straightened out, cleaned etc. Now if you look closely at what they sell for (well, are advertised for) I was very low. I contacted a guy who bought a load of toolboxes and other stuff recently and said that I was listing for £25.00 I also sent a pic. He came back and took them and a load of other stuff I knew he liked, before listing them. £95.00 squeezed out of his cold dead hands. Random ad on FB. Check the individual prices. Matt got these and about 10 more large safety, warning and speed restriction signs as part of the same deal. Helps me make space and him happy. While I was unpacking I found a load of my favourites in a cabinet. They have gone back up in various places. I felt it was perfect as part of this purging and Mojo returning. By 10.00pm last night another set of new, unused vintage Halogen spotlights sold, I agreed to post them to possibly the most challenging postal address I have sent anything to. But it’s another £20.00 in the kitty which has grown to beyond £1300.00 This is crazy, and a real businessman would have had £5k from the same stuff, but overall my investment was still less than the return, and most importantly, the pleasure I have had from them….. kinda priceless. That postal address. Jackie Chan* Unit Rear of aspect ducting 24 Right Side Of driveway Co154lu Funny how weird it feels though…… Originally I thought that if my selling off stuff I had no use for brought in £500.00 toward another vehicle purchase, to reduce the self induced guilt… I would be doing well. Last night…. So in the mean time, I do hope that the universe will come into play and stop me, but if it doesn’t, hey….. Happy Skinned Knuckles. I feel the guilt. Amazingly it is 11.30 already. Friday. Coffee and custard creams, then garage. I did start on the shelves of Chevy truck parts yesterday. But it is a slow, deliberate process. Sorting out so much irrelevant items into different storage spaces and trying to keep a mental track of what I see. Mostly, I have no clue what I have in my hands. This will be fun. Later.
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MY BUILD LINK: http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...585901]Redneck Express - 1966 C10 Short Fleetside MY USA ROADTRIPS http://forum.retro-rides.org/thread/...2018-humdinger IF YOU CAN'T FIX IT WITH A HAMMER, YOU'VE GOT AN ELECTRICAL PROBLEM MATE. |
03-15-2024, 07:37 AM | #2279 |
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Rochester, KENT
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Re: GRIZZ’s ‘79 - 2WD BLAZER Challenge over in London, England. “~It’s not a Project
.
DOES ANYONE STILL LOOK AT THIS THREAD? Interested? Do I stop the copy and paste thing here?
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MY BUILD LINK: http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...585901]Redneck Express - 1966 C10 Short Fleetside MY USA ROADTRIPS http://forum.retro-rides.org/thread/...2018-humdinger IF YOU CAN'T FIX IT WITH A HAMMER, YOU'VE GOT AN ELECTRICAL PROBLEM MATE. |
10-23-2024, 09:51 PM | #2280 |
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Join Date: May 2013
Location: Post Falls, ID
Posts: 898
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Re: GRIZZ’s ‘79 - 2WD BLAZER Challenge over in London, England. “~It’s not a Project
I check on your shenanigans, occasionally.
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