the rotors had a hint of rust so they recieved a kiss from a lathe to clean them up before PC.
the front end was rebuilt recently, all the parts are in excellent shape.
the inner axle seals will be replaced with double lipped units since the single lipped are a concern on the Cruisers. the one side was showing gear lube contamination already.
Dougal,
thanks for your observation, you do have a critical eye. I did not realize your desire for the old 40s, I might have misjudged you.
the point of the post was to show how most shops remove the seal so they can reuse it. the practice works. if you are working on your own vehicle and you need to remove the seal but don't have the cash or the desire to replace a seal that is newish then this is how to accomplish the task.
during reassembly anything that needs replacing will be replaced.
Seals are cheap and i have them in stock.
The goal at this time is to get the drivetrain reliable, improve the performance a bit, add PS and install the body properly, then we added preventive rust control for the frame and anything under the truck since it will be used year round in a salty enviroment.
Henry,
galvanizing is for bridges and Rovers.
galvanized frames are a bugger to work with.
galvanizing can twist frames since the frame will be acid dipped then into the galvanizing solution and heated to 850 degrees. this heat "relaxes" the frame and it can twist during this time.
The BJ70 worktruck in the other thread had it's frame galvanized. the truck is also sitting crooked, the frame is suspect of being twisted. once the body is removed then we will measure and find out exactly what occured.
i have been warned by 3 galvanizing shops of this concern so, for these reasons, i do not recommend galvanizing a frame.
if someone else wants to recommend the process that is fine, i don't.