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Follow field reporters from around the world as they take shots from cruise nights and shows in their areas. If you want to become a field reporter send us an email. classicpickupsgarage@gmail.com

Saturday, February 27, 2010

OUTSIDE THE BOX

OUTSIDE THE BOX

Why did you build a truck? They are traditionally seen as the step brother to cars and I mean any car! They are the daily work horse and not cool cruisers. Hauling your friends around meant everyone called for shot gun because no one wanted to ride in the bed like yesterdays left over baggage. Carrying friends in the bed may have been cool at some hay rides but then again, well you know. If you know about the problems with steering wheels when making out at the local Drive-In, then you know the lack of a back seat was very un-cool. Your girl friend always wanted her friend or was it her ride along security and a truck didn't allow for that, which did force some of you to ask dad for the keys to the family car (now how un-cool was that?).

When your friends said, 'a truck' why not a 50 Mercury or 32 high boy or 56 Chevrolet? You wished you could give them a beautiful line of BS explaining your vision of a cool cruiser but, more than likely you accepted their taunting and continued with your build. For some of us building a truck was an affordable way out because no one wanted an old work truck, consequently trucks were cheap to get and relatively inexpensive to work on. To have seen something special within the sheet metal of a truck that the vast majority of others failed to see was imaginative but still not cool at cruise nights. 

Trucks are not open to easy customization but you knew that they were front heavy and having mostly open air to work with in the rear there were few options to pick from. Likewise they were not easily hot rodded because a little thing called weight to power ratio. Never mind that way back when, but not so long ago some automotive engineers in Michigan decided that sculpted body lines were out and straight, square box designs with big, no check that, huge open grills were preferable to the soft and supple body lines of yesteryear. That threw a monkey wrench into things. We were all left asking, so how do you customize a cube? Lines were eventually drawn when like everything else one generation moves on and another comes along each having their likes and preferences based on what they grew up with.

 Where some saw the cube as beautiful, my generation and my piers choose to build, customize and generally restore either with original parts or custom after market parts trucks, those personify the fifties with all their excess chrome and full body lines. Nothing was spared when these trucks were designed by Detroit, so no imagination, no thought and no part can be devised that is too much to be considered when restoring or customizing these representatives of true Americana. From the suspension, to the cab, and bed nothing and I mean nothing has been spared the manufacturers attention.


Anyone wishing to build a 1956 Ford F100 can do so without purchasing one part from Ford. That's right, not one part! Wheels to motor, or cab and interior to rear view mirror all parts are available from after market parts houses and the same can be said for the Chevrolet trucks. Yes Fred, there is a huge market for these trucks and it's growing. Magazines, parts houses and speed shops are falling all over themselves to get more and more involved, and clubs are there to support truck owners as well.  In today's market, trucks are quickly becoming the choice for collectors and the money is growing with the demand. I don't care if it's a 55 F100 or a 57 Cameo or 69 C-10 your choice to customize a truck is thinking outside the box. It is said that he who laughs last laughs best. So when everyone else kept saying trucks would never be cool you just smiled, trophy in hand and cruised down the boulevard with your best gal at your side.

Keep on Trickin'
Dan
The Music Man


Friday, February 19, 2010

FORD IN A FORD

FORD IN A FORD

Are you a Ford in a Ford kind of trucker? Perhaps the purest in you has
stepped aside for the more convenient and less expensive substitute and/or
your truck purchase came with a modern generic substitute. I have nothing
against substitution, especially if you love the fat fender Ford body style
but, couldn't see a Ford motor in your future. I understand the mysterious
call of more and more horse power per cubic inch that all motor heads must
have and/or the massive heads another brand may have had in your decision to
build a truck without a Ford motor in the engine bay.

As I said, there are many combinations of motor and transmissions that fit
well under the hood of your truck, so why not a Ford in a Ford? The Ford
line up of engines has been on the race track for many years, albeit dirt,
flat, round, straight, Laguna, Sebring, Nuremberg, or climbing Pikes Peak,
Ford engines have won European as well as American races for many years and
when stuffed under the right hood, those very same motors sell for six digit
figures. It makes no difference if it's an in line six for you purest, or a
flat head V-8 in that three window coup or a Shelby Mustang 500 GT. Alright,
I admit the Chevrolet engine is cheaper and parts are more abundant but why
work so hard to turn people's heads when you drive up. After all you just
spent tens of thousands of dollars on the truck frame and body just to make
your FORD the best looking one out there and then they open the hood?

Ford offers crate engines in many different cubic inch and horse power
rating. The 347 is available in 330 hp, 350hp, 405hp, and 415 hp versions.
The 330 hp long block can be had for around $3,000 and the 351 Windsor rated
at 400hp can be yours for around $4,000. There is the 427 (who wouldn't want
a side oilier with those massive heads?) The 428 and 429 cubic inch
displacement motors of legend especially if the 428 was stuffed in a Mustang
and then there was every ones favorite, the answer to the Hemi, the one and
only Boss 429. Lest we forget The 390 and 460 engines that can be had for a
song and built to impressive horse power ratings. Ford motors such as the
521ci producing 580 hp, or the 4.6 Liter naturally aspirated or supercharged
with horse power limited only by your budget. How about the Ford 392ci at
475hp it's a bit smaller but comes with respectable numbers. Ford has many
big block race versions to choose from, all you have to do is dream big.
Since your dreaming, don't forget the Ford work horses, the venerable 289
and its spin off the 302 Windsor and Cleveland motors. They are inexpensive,
great for fuel economy and dare I say it, build ability.

Caution! Horror stories abound and yes I could tell you a few myself, so I
caution you, DO NOT, let someone or some shop you are unfamiliar with work
on your motor or truck for that matter. Ask friends what they know and check
with car clubs in the area. Seek out the advice of others that have dealt
with the builder by asking for a client list. Avoid having the major portion
of your money in the hands of the builder until the job is done. Prior to
starting work, make sure you settle how and in what percentage increments
payments will be made. There are endless combinations of engine packages
available from Ford motor company and Ford racing, not to mention a whole
host of reputable engine builders. After having done your home work, all you
have to do is pick a motor, install it and join the Ford in a Ford club.
However, if you stuffed one of the other guy's engines in your Ford, then it
was right for you and I look forward to seeing your truck on the street real
soon. As we like to say in the Pickups Limited club, drive em' that's what
there for.

Until that time
Dan
The Music Man

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Just Trucks

Just Trucks

Vendor Pricing

Vendor Pricing
F100 Western Nationals
204 trucks
in 2009! The 2010 is going to be the show to attend. There is a cruise on Friday, more details to come. It will leave from the host hotel at 9am on June 25th.
www.f100westernnationals.com