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- #201
I keep forgetting to order switches, so I haven't made any progress on the switch panel. I did clean up some tool paths to take care of some issues. I also clumped some processes together that should remove a few tool changes.
I'm not sure I'm doing this correctly, but I think it'll work fine. My body shop buddy who is painting the roof helped me get the cap glued down to the gutter. I didn't think it'd be a good idea to just rivet it on, so I bolted the gutter down, being that the body isn't square, and the chances of getting the gutter square is slim to none. Pulling corner to corner, the body was about 3/8" out of whack. Probably always has been, and was likely within spec. 70's vehicles were terrible for body work accuracy compared to today.
The cap is new from a Classic Cruisers, it did require a little trimming, but nothing crazy. Some places I took a 1/4" off, others nothing. I'd say on average I took about an 1/8" off all the way around. I trimmed a couple of problem areas first. Threw it back on the vehicle, then used a scriber going off the outside of the gutter to make a consistent line all the way around. I set it on top of the down draft table, and just used a belt sander with an 80g belt to trim it back. Worked extremely well I thought. Basically the same exact skill set I use when fitting wood parts to a wall. The down draft table sucked up most of the nastiness.
Going of body work buddy's recommendation, we used a 3M urethane glue to glue the two together
I've only got a few weeks until I need to throw this thing on a trailer and haul it to where the R2.8 conversion, AC install, and power steering will happen, so I need to hustle up and get this wrapped up.
I'm curious how much my productivity will jump at work. Two things; I'll have some big bills to offset so I need to turn and burn and get some dollars rolling in, and I won't be dicking around with a Landcruiser project every free minute.
I went to Menards this morning and cleaned them out of cheap little C-Clamps. Could've used a bunch more. The wooden Jorgensen Clamps worked well, and my hands understand pretty well how much pressure I'm actually putting on the work with those. So I'm not crunching shtuff together that I shouldn't be.
Took the 80 on a light off-road adventure yesterday. Went coyote hunting, I was a little concerned getting back up that hill, (it's way steeper than it looks), but a heavy gutless vehicle with good weight distribution, tires, and four wheel drive is hard to beat. My Super Duty would've struggled, the LC just crawled up no problem. I hope I don't win the lottery, blowing $200k on a resto mod 80 series would be hard to say no to. I like that thing. Probably more than I should.
I'm not sure I'm doing this correctly, but I think it'll work fine. My body shop buddy who is painting the roof helped me get the cap glued down to the gutter. I didn't think it'd be a good idea to just rivet it on, so I bolted the gutter down, being that the body isn't square, and the chances of getting the gutter square is slim to none. Pulling corner to corner, the body was about 3/8" out of whack. Probably always has been, and was likely within spec. 70's vehicles were terrible for body work accuracy compared to today.
The cap is new from a Classic Cruisers, it did require a little trimming, but nothing crazy. Some places I took a 1/4" off, others nothing. I'd say on average I took about an 1/8" off all the way around. I trimmed a couple of problem areas first. Threw it back on the vehicle, then used a scriber going off the outside of the gutter to make a consistent line all the way around. I set it on top of the down draft table, and just used a belt sander with an 80g belt to trim it back. Worked extremely well I thought. Basically the same exact skill set I use when fitting wood parts to a wall. The down draft table sucked up most of the nastiness.
Going of body work buddy's recommendation, we used a 3M urethane glue to glue the two together
I've only got a few weeks until I need to throw this thing on a trailer and haul it to where the R2.8 conversion, AC install, and power steering will happen, so I need to hustle up and get this wrapped up.
I'm curious how much my productivity will jump at work. Two things; I'll have some big bills to offset so I need to turn and burn and get some dollars rolling in, and I won't be dicking around with a Landcruiser project every free minute.

I went to Menards this morning and cleaned them out of cheap little C-Clamps. Could've used a bunch more. The wooden Jorgensen Clamps worked well, and my hands understand pretty well how much pressure I'm actually putting on the work with those. So I'm not crunching shtuff together that I shouldn't be.
Took the 80 on a light off-road adventure yesterday. Went coyote hunting, I was a little concerned getting back up that hill, (it's way steeper than it looks), but a heavy gutless vehicle with good weight distribution, tires, and four wheel drive is hard to beat. My Super Duty would've struggled, the LC just crawled up no problem. I hope I don't win the lottery, blowing $200k on a resto mod 80 series would be hard to say no to. I like that thing. Probably more than I should.