Good luck
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awp_cruiser said:I suggest you think of it as a process than as a product. .
Take my hat off to you guys, it would cost a heap here to restore a truck with that much rust here.A lot of your tools and materials and paint is sooo much cheaper over there.Here it is usually cheaper to buy one in better nick and less work, guess we are luckier that way.Good fun anyway and it keeps a man out of trouble.LOLthegreencantina said:Here are the pics of my baby when I picked her up...
I'm thinking of this as less than a restoration, and leaning toward a resurection...
True Love... through and through....
Coolerman said:A while back someone mentioned a book titled Zen and The Art of Motorcycle Maintanence. Everyone trying to resurrect a Cruiser should buy this book and read it right after buying the FSM!
IanB said:I also think you need to double your budget. When I ran the numbers I added up the big stuff (Toybox, hi-steer, chrome moly axles, ect.) but I honestly find its the small BS that kills the budget. All those $50-100 trips to Napa add up, hell I have probably used $500 worth of Gunk cleaning stuff. You will also be amazed at how many crappy bolts, gaskets and seals you will have to replace. How many wire wheels you will go through at $15 a pop and how many rattle cans of paint you will use painting everything else but the body. And don't forget to budget for!
Oh and if possible I would budget more for a welder. Search "Outfitting" for extensive debates on MIG versus TIG but also a lot of comparisions of various welders by price and performance. If you use it much at all you will soon want something better than a $500 welder so spend the money up front now, get a quality 220 volt welder and have it for life.
Good luck and more pics!![]()