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went to see the nostalgia drags at Woodburn, Or., and decided I was ready to again build custom cars. I had just finished a new home with nice workshop, so the timing was right.
While I was cleaning up my new work truck, I was thinking about a car project. I started to wonder if I could alter the Toyota pickup and make the front look like a Model A or deuce, maybe with motorcycle fenders. I wanted to keep it as a work truck, but make it look like a hot rod. I did some sketching and decided it was possible, but I would have to lengthen the wheelbase. Early cars had the front axle very near the front of the car, with motor behind, but modern cars had the front end under the motor, with more body forward of the axle.
I called my old high school buddy Bill Brundage, who had several hot rods, to get his opinion. I explained what I was trying to do, deuce style hood and grill, tube axle, wishbones, nerf bars and motorcycle style fenders. He thought it might work and then started the entire process by offering to donate a tube front axle and wishbones. Bill had a 34 Ford coupe that he built in high school and I had made a straight tube front axle and wishbone setup for it in 1964. He had recently redone the car and replaced my front axle with Mustang II style front end. He sent me the axle, wishbones and early Ford front spindles and I was on my way.
I removed the stock front bumper, fenders, grillwork, inner fender wells, suspension and everything forward of the firewall, except the frame, motor and steering box. There was an adequate front cross member, so I got out my trusty Speedway Motors catalog and ordered a transversal front spring, hangers, chrome shocks and a kit to put metric brakes on early Ford spindles. When the parts arrived, I made a front spring perch, welded it to the frame, mounted the front axle setup and built brackets to hold the tubular split wishbones. I installed the front brake kit, put on wheels, installed brake lines and set the truck on it's own wheels. I was going to install a left side drag link for the steering, but realized the stock steering box would work for cross steering, if I rotated the pitman arm 180 degrees. I made a cross steering link and tie rod, and the front suspension was done.
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