I Cut The Back of My Frame Off (BUT FIXED IT!) |

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  • Опубликовано: 19 дек 2024

Комментарии • 85

  • @projectcarrescue
    @projectcarrescue  Год назад +5

    Thank You for Watching My Car Restoration!
    🔔 Don't Forget to Subscribe to This RUclips Channel: www.youtube.com/@projectcarrescue
    ➡ 1964 Impala Wagon Car Restoration Video Playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLlNa0RcbmQwE75lSo8l2BZl7f5Mxo_FeI

  • @cesarmagdaleno6009
    @cesarmagdaleno6009 Год назад +2

    I just want to say. I love the sound effects.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Thank you! I think I’m hysterical. My family does not.

  • @AMB1800
    @AMB1800 Год назад +5

    Wow, that was a big project and you knocked it out nicely! Giving a new life to this car 🙏🏼

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +2

      Thank you! It’s definitely a big project, but I really enjoy the process! Thanks for watching!

  • @MarksGarageChannel
    @MarksGarageChannel Год назад +1

    I love the PSA, Bags, and clear bins!

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Thank you! I’m glad you enjoyed it. It’s a mistake I’ve made in the past and won’t make again! :)

  • @indyfastal
    @indyfastal Год назад +1

    Great job. The sound effects were absolutely hysterical...

  • @CAROLDDISCOVER-2025
    @CAROLDDISCOVER-2025 Год назад +2

    Interesting. Well lot of people are screaming about rust repair. Housing most them or not going to be buying an old car and fixing it up. The taboo subject of cutting and welding your frame and you tackled it with great success.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Thank you! It’s a lot of work, but if you love doing it, it’s great fun!

  • @mightymikethebear
    @mightymikethebear Год назад +2

    This a cool video. They say that you need to remove the trash before the repairs can be done.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Heck yes! There is a LOT of trash to take out on this one! Thanks for watching!

  • @WILODSM
    @WILODSM Год назад +2

    Awesome work!!!

    • @WiringRescue
      @WiringRescue Год назад

      Thank you! Also - nice dsm! I’ll likely have a DSM project in here soon. Stay tuned!

  • @howardgilbert5008
    @howardgilbert5008 Год назад +1

    I love your voice over sound effects. Hilarious!

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Haha - I’m glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for watching!

  • @Mrhalligan39
    @Mrhalligan39 Год назад +2

    Big props to your sound guy, usually there are problems with pitch rise during fast motion clips, but they handled it perfectly.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Haha. I’m my own sound guy, and I’m doing my best with the basic skills I have ! Thanks for watching!

  • @andrewreece3861
    @andrewreece3861 Год назад +1

    Pretty ambitious and impressive work! I like the cut of your jib. You definitely earned a new subscriber.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Heck yes! Thank you! I’m glad you like the content, and appreciate the sub!

  • @AMStationEngineer
    @AMStationEngineer Год назад +2

    Your skill level FAR EXCEEDS your subscriber count, but hang in there! Definitely impressed, and my family was in the autobody biz for 80 years!

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Haha! Thank you! I really appreciate that. I do hope to grow the subscribers and have a cool little community of people with project cars!

    • @AMStationEngineer
      @AMStationEngineer Год назад +1

      ​@@projectcarrescue; I spent most of the 1970's learning how to 'work metal' from a WWII US Navy veteran named "Freddy", who taught me how to "Pick and file" with a Snap-on body hammer with a curved pick, fresh off the Snap-on truck, which seemed to deduct about 30% of every (part time) bi-weekly paycheck. Freddy provided me a 'well-loved' custom made, medium coarseness Vixxen File with a long maple handle which was made in the late 1940's (not the closed loop handles like they sell now). He set the file up with leather and thin Masonite backing at the very center of the file, which gave it 'a little bow-out in the middle', which delivered some of the smoothest filework you ever saw! Every three months for 15 years, the file was disassembled, placed into a homade "file tumbler" with hardwood (fireplace) ash, which sharpened it,, then moved it to a second tumbler with crushed charcoal combined with Marvel Mystery Oil. I furnished the fireplace ash, and the crushed charcoal. When he retired, Freddy handed me a second file similar to mine, and one of the sharpening tumblers, it was then that I learned that all of the Vixxen files in the shop were built and maintained by him, and that I was the only one who helped with their upkeep. He kept the other 2 files and handle sets, along with the other ash tumbler. It's memories like this that you are making now, and will cherish when you become a "fossil" like me! Good luck!

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      That’s an awesome story & memory! Like you said, I’m trying to make as many of those long lasting great memories as I can!! Thanks so much for watching and sharing!

  • @mattcasoni
    @mattcasoni Год назад +2

    If you told me “I’m going to the store to get metal to replace the back of an x frame…” I would say yeah that’s not going to work… but there it is. You did it. Totally awesome and amazing. Thank you for sharing your work. New subscriber #179.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +2

      Lol! Thank you! It’s a weird world I live in, but I’m making it work! Thanks for watching and subscribing!!!

  • @vicswanby454
    @vicswanby454 Год назад +4

    Back in the mid 90s when I was in the Marine Corps because so many people were getting hurt by the springs shooting out of a truck we would run a ratchet strap from one spring to the other and just get it to where it was slightly tight and that would keep the springs in the perch. Use it if you'd like it's saved quite a few teeth threw out the rest of my time in the Marine Corps. Something I've used even after I got out. It also helps forgiving them back into the Perch on re assembly.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      That’s a great tip! Thanks for sharing it and watching the video! Also - Thanks for your service!

  • @richcaseaxon
    @richcaseaxon Год назад +1

    Tons of work, looks great, nice job

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Thank you! It really is a ton of work, but I’m thoroughly enjoying it!

  • @timpsensky5181
    @timpsensky5181 Год назад +1

    That was a ton of work. You made it look easy

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Haha! Thank you! It was definitely a ton of work! Have a long ways to go still! Thanks for watching!

  • @alvinbaker8137
    @alvinbaker8137 Год назад +1

    you put out a pretty good video! hopefully, you get plenty more subs soon !

  • @hickeyskustomresto
    @hickeyskustomresto Год назад +1

    That's a lot of work, well done

  • @jayholewinski
    @jayholewinski Год назад +1

    Bolt organization is key. I agree.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Yes! It took me 20 years to learn the importance of it, but I’m a believer of organizing bolts now! Thanks for watching!

  • @keithgarland3404
    @keithgarland3404 Год назад

    Great work, really enjoyed your chassis repairs, when you were doing all the measurements, I thought that doesn't seem right, that the measurements were different from one side to the other. Also you mentioned the possible accident damage to the rear chassis. You managed to get it all square with the use of the Lazer level. Years ago the car manufacturers used to include a diagram and measurements of the chassis in the workshop manual.

  • @michaeldonahay8255
    @michaeldonahay8255 Год назад +1

    I have seen video on shorting frames. I like to see a video on making a frame wider.

  • @ericuncapher9922
    @ericuncapher9922 Год назад +1

    Good job 👍

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Thank you very much! Lots of work, but very rewarding!

  • @rolandos64
    @rolandos64 Год назад +1

    They make some contraption that prints labels. You attach label to your box. You scan label and it tells you what you saved in the box. You would have to write that down in the app for reference

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      That would definitely be great to have. I’ll look into it!

  • @tectalabyss
    @tectalabyss Год назад +1

    New subscriber. Liked and shared.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much! I’m glad you like the content!

  • @SamFBM
    @SamFBM Год назад +1

    good vide, subscribed !

  • @garysgarage.2841
    @garysgarage.2841 Год назад +1

    This is some next level shit. That bend you had seems like it went in the direction of gravity from sitting out on it's side.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      That is very possible! It could have also been a combination of gravity + beginning with a crappy rotted frame. The good news is that it is laser straight now!

  • @lynnmackenzie9501
    @lynnmackenzie9501 Год назад +1

    Lot of work for a 64 chev x frame. I did a convert and used parts cars; ended up trashing good frames as no one wanted them but that was 10 years ago..

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Yeah, I absolutely could have saved time and money by buying a good frame to start with, but I enjoy the challenge of working on the really rusty, unsavable ones. I just zone out and build stuff, its very peaceful to be honest.

  • @fredhasenbuhler8498
    @fredhasenbuhler8498 9 месяцев назад

    Where did you buy the part for the rear frame? I have a 64 x frame and I need to replace that piece also but can’t find where to buy it. Thank you for any help you can give.

  • @michaeldonahay8255
    @michaeldonahay8255 Год назад +1

    Where you buy the metal for the rear fram

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      I just went to a local metal supplier, and bought a sheet of steel that was 4x8 feet.

  • @lonestarlows
    @lonestarlows Год назад +1

    That was quite a task. Good tip on the laser level. I guess that should have been done first. 2 things...1. I'm guilty of bins that aren't clear. And I find myself digging thru them every couple months looking for stuff.....2 is that the milwaukee m18 1/2 inch impact? Those things are the mack daddy of electric impacts.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      @lonestarlows It really was a ton of work, but it was cool learning new things and figuring out how to make it all happen.
      The laser level would have been GREAT at the beginning. I actually discovered something was weird when I was test fitting the frame under the body for the first time. The mounts were sitting a little off to one side. So I grabbed a laser level at harbor freight and was like “Oh crap”. Lol. That was a good lesson for future builds!
      The clear bins are key! I just started buying them a couple at a time to replace my old ones, and my part organization is definitely improving! As for the Milwaukee - YES! It was my Christmas present to myself 2 years ago and I absolutely LOVE it. One of the most useful tools I have for sure.
      Lastly, Thanks a bunch for watching! As you may have noticed, I moved this Impala build over to this new channel because these build videos were not getting any views on my @rattymusclecar channel when mixed into all my wiring videos. So this @projectcarrescue channel is the official home for my Impalas and other project cars!

    • @lonestarlows
      @lonestarlows Год назад

      @@projectcarrescue 😎😎

  • @tommat86
    @tommat86 Год назад +1

    +1 For the "public service announcement". To add to that, you have a phone in your pocket with a camera. Take pictures when taking things apart! Because sometimes you put 20 different bolts, nuts, and smaller pieces in one bag that belongs to one part, but you will also forget what went where exactly...

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Totally agreed! Photos and/or video are hugely helpful! That’s one of the reasons I make these videos actually! Thanks for watching!

  • @chriscatarcio2983
    @chriscatarcio2983 Год назад +3

    In a dry state some moron is scraping a perfect rust free frame. For 10 cents a pound.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Very true! I wish it were cheaper to ship them to the north east! Thanks for watching!

  • @impalasupersport6171
    @impalasupersport6171 Год назад +1

    Anything new on the wagon??

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Solid question! I had to take a little break because of space issues in my garage, but yes! There is a bit more done. I’ll have videos again soonish! Thanks for checking on me!

  • @GTOFERN
    @GTOFERN Год назад +1

    New subscriber #272. Fantastic work. I’m just curious if taking those measurements while the frame is on its side might have skewed the readings just a hair?

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      It’s very possible that having the frame on its side could have made the measurements wonky, though I did dozens with it flat too. I’m sure it was it was a little bit of everything that caused it to be off. Luckily I was able to straighten it before fully welding it all. I also tested it under the body again when I was done and it seems good now. I’m excited to sandblast and prime it!

  • @guvnorduff
    @guvnorduff Год назад +1

    You might try chaining the coil spring to the frame for safety. Chain is cheap insurance

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Yes! I’ve done that in the past, but my chain currently has an engine attached to it, so I couldn’t use it! Thank you for watching!

  • @jameslewry2950
    @jameslewry2950 Год назад +1

    Are you sure you know what you are doing, mate, please be careful. Hooroo mate

  • @franciscocollins6715
    @franciscocollins6715 Год назад +1

    Is like a Corvette inside of it

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      I wish it performed like a corvette! Sadly, it’s a big ol’ beast of a wagon! Thanks for watching! :)

  • @dagamore
    @dagamore Год назад +1

    Why do your air tools make the same noise mine does? :P

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Weird right!? They all have that same awesome sound!?

  • @keithgarland3404
    @keithgarland3404 Год назад +2

    When is the next episode coming ?

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад +1

      Great question! I think it will be a few weeks, because I want to sandblast and prime the frame next, and I needed some decent weather for that, which is just now arriving in Massachusetts! Don’t worry, though, I’ve got TONS more work to do on this, and lots of video to make. :) Thanks for staying in touch, and making sure I’m still alive!

  • @chriscatarcio2983
    @chriscatarcio2983 Год назад +1

    If you're going to replace the springs. Cut them with a torch in two places.

    • @projectcarrescue
      @projectcarrescue  Год назад

      Completely agreed. I’m probably keeping these for now though, so they had to stay in one piece. :(

  • @robertunderwood6011
    @robertunderwood6011 6 месяцев назад

    put a chain throw the spring and the A arm

  • @Ali-iq4bb
    @Ali-iq4bb Год назад +1

    Somebody shoot me!!! Why!! Would you patch a tire w less than 2/32?

  • @Ali-iq4bb
    @Ali-iq4bb Год назад +1

    I just watched this in case it helps
    ruclips.net/video/ShTpzNSjKTQ/видео.html