Rosie the Riveter Build.

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Annnnnnnd, lastly but not least, we re-wired the entire cruiser. Took ten days and we ended up pulling out 40-50ft of obsolete/broken/sh***y wire but here it is. So much better. The final straw was the head light fuse started to blow whenever you powered up the lights. That was too far. We stripped it down, went over every circuit and repaired any damage, replaced broken wires, removed all the twisted and taped connections, the "eight different colour wires in one short run isn't a problem" wires, obsolete not doing anything but being a hazard wires, and the old tired fuse panel. We converted it to two group 31 commercial batteries and mounted them in the rear with their own designated 150A breaker. We made our own electrical distribution centre and mounted it where the battery was under the hood. It has a primary and a secondary fuse panel and the secondary is isolated from the system by a low voltage isolater that senses battery voltage and disconnects it automatically is the batteries drop below 11.6V. This way if the lights or the stereo get left on you will always have glow plugs and starter and one or two other things. Wired the winch in with its own breaker and tidied the wiring up and loomed it all. We also replaced the tired, broken wired, nasty, old, busted tail lights with new ones that we ran new wires for.

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Supplies
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All the battery connections are soldered crimped and heat shrinked.
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Grommets protecting the wiring
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Wires coming into the battery box
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Batteries fit with room for the tool box!
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Nicely done John...truck is looking great. I use to soldier all my connections in the old days, just use quality crimping tools and thats all. I do not like how the soldier travels up the wire making it non flexable.


This is my next project, like the idea and design..

My go to crimping tool.
 
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Nicely done John...truck is looking great. I use to soldier all my connections in the old days, just use quality crimping tools and thats all. I do not like how the soldier travels up the wire making it non flexable.


This is my next project, like the idea and design..

My go to crimping tool.

That is slick. I want to eventually water proof it all but this is what I was able to do for the time being. We will see how it holds up for now.
 
Nice work @LittleJohn ; thanks for the update! Glad you're still working on your 40.


Oh ya. She's coming along. There is enough Dynamat to do the entire inside in the mail. It was supposed to show up before the snow...but...
 
So that's not much is it? Where did you get it?
 
Finally got around to putting the Dnamat in. Once we did that we realized we needed to replace the floor mat because the old one was pretty rough. We went to Buckerfields and bought some 3/16th rubber matting that you buy off of a 4ft wide roll for 8 bucks a foot. We then made a cardboard template and cut it to fit. It turned out pretty good and the sound has been reduced by at least 50%. You can hold a conversation now and make a *cough* hands free *cough* phone call while driving!!
Seats out along with patches of 40 yer old sound proofing.
and the dynamat goes in.

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I meant to post this a year ago when I heard it on the radio, the lady who was the model/inspiration for the old "rosie the riveter" posters died at 96.

Kindof interesting, I hadn't realized it was based on a real person until I heard them talking about it.


Back on subject, trucks looking good. I like that buckerfields rubber too.

Sometimes they have stacks of different products outside Industrial plastics as well. I think they do limited runs of recycled stuff. Makes good mats for sure.
 
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Good to meet you tonight. And to see you’re still at it.
 
There’s a reason my 20 year build is about to turn into a 30 year build… and that’s before things get fancy. TPI won’t be in till at least 31 years, maybe more.
 
Looks great John, nice to see the updates.

Is that oil filter housing the one that fits with the oil filter below it?
 

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