not a lot of channels doing this much detailed work and a limited budget. The 1965 beetle was over a year of hard work and it's looking pretty sweet for a patina restoration. Did you watch or comment on any of the beetle series?
@@CTmoog maybe your budget is limited because you buy and start too many projects buy parts for them and never finish one. Why not start a project and put your money into that one and concentrate on finishing it? What happened to the swamp dragon? You took it all apart and put epoxy primer on the cab and that was it. You said you were going to get the engine rebuilt and never heard anything else and it was off to the next unfinished project
All you need now is to wipe it down and put Eastwood rust encapsulator on it and top coat with chassis black. I did that with my F-100 in 2017 and it still looks great. Good luck 👍
Great job! Curious, did you bail on the Porsche? Did you sell the VW? And what happened to the Karman Ghia? I’m like you, collect projects…hoping to see you get one on the road as a daily driver!
When you reassemble rear brakes, you need to pack the bearings with wheel bearing grease and smear some grease on the lip or the new bearing seals to prevent them from burning and causing them to leak. Remember, most all factory seals come with grease on them, aftermarket come dry. After driving vehicle for awhile, gear lube works it’s way into the wheel bearings. But it won’t just flow into them from filling up the diff. I’ve been watching you for awhile and you have come along way since you started.
Actually, no, you do not use grease on them. The differential oil is what lubricates them. When the oil level is correct, it comes down the axle tube and hits the bearings. Also he has a limited slip differential, and he's got to use limited slip specific oil, and any other lube, such as grease, that gets in there will ruin the clutches in the differential
When you remove brake cables, try sliding a 12 point wrench over the retaining fingers. This will allow you to just pull cables out of frame, backing plates or whatever cables are installed in.
@CT ,the aftermarket transmission mount , what I would do is fill in the holes and drill your own holes. I had an issue with a aftermarket wheel well liner for my 2010 Nissan Versa. Some of the mounting holes were slightly off. But there were enough holes in the right spot to mount it so it won't fall off.
@@CTmoog What I recommend... is to refurbish and use all the original parts that you can! You won't blow cash buying new parts and you also know the original parts actually fit and work as intended. By the way, another recommendation: STOP CUTTING ALL THE BRAKE AND FUEL LINES OFF! Remove them intact!! Why? Because when you go to replace them, you have the originals to act as a model for new lines that you buy or the ones you will make yourself. All you'll need to do is make sure the pre-fabbed units match up or that your hand made parts match up. In other words, save the original pieces to act as your example. Do this even with the soft lines. The reality is that while new parts will most likely be OK, they often are NOT OK. If you keep your originals intact, there will be no doubt as to what will work as a replacement and what won't. Best wishes! - Max Giganteum
that axle is set up kinda like its Class 8 brothers. the wedges that FORD uses are split and if you use a standard screwdriver to spread them a little they will slide on and off real easy. Just an FYI
Hi CT. I saw some days ago on a video, PB Blaster have a gel, smear it on rust, let it sit for some time, pressure wash it off, and you have bare steel back.
Omg CT I gotta stop looking at the comments. In my opinion you gotta do your thing….I think people watch your channel because of who you are ….not what you work on. But they don’t understand that. Who would care if it’s an old VW or an old Ford? CT is an artist……!
Will you ever put this one back together or will it end up like all the other ones you have stripped
That frame is in remarkable condition. Way better than other ones you've tackled. Must be a welcome change 😊
Thanks man! Yes, it's not too bad.
🖤 I love the truck and can’t wait to see her running
Don’t hold your breath. This guy never finishes anything he starts.
You'll probably never see that here 😂
@cyn2854 Thank you! =)
not a lot of channels doing this much detailed work and a limited budget. The 1965 beetle was over a year of hard work and it's looking pretty sweet for a patina restoration. Did you watch or comment on any of the beetle series?
@@CTmoog maybe your budget is limited because you buy and start too many projects buy parts for them and never finish one. Why not start a project and put your money into that one and concentrate on finishing it? What happened to the swamp dragon? You took it all apart and put epoxy primer on the cab and that was it. You said you were going to get the engine rebuilt and never heard anything else and it was off to the next unfinished project
Look forward to the next episode !! 👍
Thanks man!
When you get that back together in 20 years can you bring it by and show me I'll be in a senior home by then.....lmao
HAHA! =)
All you need now is to wipe it down and put Eastwood rust encapsulator on it and top coat with chassis black. I did that with my F-100 in 2017 and it still looks great. Good luck 👍
everything takes a LOT of effort /work BUT also don't forget to mention the cuts, bumps, bruises and burns... they deserve credit too.
thanks for kicking of my Sunday the right way
no problem! have a great day! =)
Missing the 914 build , is it scrapped ?
Great job!
Curious, did you bail on the Porsche? Did you sell the VW?
And what happened to the Karman Ghia?
I’m like you, collect projects…hoping to see you get one on the road as a daily driver!
Thanks buddy! I still have all the projects. They are in different stages of restoration. Stay tuned! =)
What you gonna take apart next?
everything! haha! =)
When you reassemble rear brakes, you need to pack the bearings with wheel bearing grease and smear some grease on the lip or the new bearing seals to prevent them from burning and causing them to leak. Remember, most all factory seals come with grease on them, aftermarket come dry. After driving vehicle for awhile, gear lube works it’s way into the wheel bearings. But it won’t just flow into them from filling up the diff. I’ve been watching you for awhile and you have come along way since you started.
Actually, no, you do not use grease on them. The differential oil is what lubricates them. When the oil level is correct, it comes down the axle tube and hits the bearings. Also he has a limited slip differential, and he's got to use limited slip specific oil, and any other lube, such as grease, that gets in there will ruin the clutches in the differential
When you remove brake cables, try sliding a 12 point wrench over the retaining fingers. This will allow you to just pull cables out of frame, backing plates or whatever cables are installed in.
@CT ,the aftermarket transmission mount , what I would do is fill in the holes and drill your own holes. I had an issue with a aftermarket wheel well liner for my 2010 Nissan Versa. Some of the mounting holes were slightly off. But there were enough holes in the right spot to mount it so it won't fall off.
Hey that's a good idea. I might do that.
@@CTmoog What I recommend... is to refurbish and use all the original parts that you can! You won't blow cash buying new parts and you also know the original parts actually fit and work as intended. By the way, another recommendation: STOP CUTTING ALL THE BRAKE AND FUEL LINES OFF! Remove them intact!! Why? Because when you go to replace them, you have the originals to act as a model for new lines that you buy or the ones you will make yourself. All you'll need to do is make sure the pre-fabbed units match up or that your hand made parts match up. In other words, save the original pieces to act as your example. Do this even with the soft lines. The reality is that while new parts will most likely be OK, they often are NOT OK. If you keep your originals intact, there will be no doubt as to what will work as a replacement and what won't. Best wishes!
- Max Giganteum
Wow ,so interesting ! The more parts you remove the more you find .😊 Step by step it's gone be great ! 👍 How does the lizzard get'n in there 😊
they have a high pressure washer, with sand blasting and water// it works great out side to remove rust on your job
that axle is set up kinda like its Class 8 brothers. the wedges that FORD uses are split and if you use a standard screwdriver to spread them a little they will slide on and off real easy.
Just an FYI
Hi CT. I saw some days ago on a video, PB Blaster have a gel, smear it on rust, let it sit for some time, pressure wash it off, and you have bare steel back.
Omg CT I gotta stop looking at the comments. In my opinion you gotta do your thing….I think people watch your channel because of who you are ….not what you work on. But they don’t understand that. Who would care if it’s an old VW or an old Ford? CT is an artist……!
its in good nick to be fair, although definitly the right time to catch it before it goes any further, great work as usual
wire wheel it epoxy prime it then go wet on wet to black chassis paint. DONE....start assembly.
Keep it up CT
thanks buddy! =)
Cool.truck
Thanks buddy!
that rust remove , is spelling OSPHO and is it green in the bottle ? I need that on my 1960 Willys frame JC 5 Jeep
Wow that frame is very nice CT!
not too bad! =) Thanks Slade!
On Chevys you can't pull the axles out until you remove the clips inside the differential.
Good.job Nice Ford
Thanks 👍
Just a FYI, do one side at a time so you have a reference to look at when your putting it back together.
Alright CT time good to see you buddy 😎
Those are retaining nuts to keep the axle shaft in place from coming out
Never know what you’ll find inside an old pumpkin.
Hopefully this one still has some life left in it.
hit the end of the axel as if you were driving it in and it will pop out
How come you don’t finish the dragon before starting on another Ford truck?
¡¡¡¡fantastic!!!!!
That frame looks good did you hit it with offso sweet frame that was my concern your good man👍✌️
Will you be doing a disc break conversion on the rear ?.
I would like to. I need to research the options.
Im wanting to see some Rusty content again! 😬
🤗👍👌💯⭐
I agree with @michelecrown2426 That frame is in remarkable condition. In a way, it must be a relief to work on a vehicle that actually has a subframe.
tapered lock washers.
Thanks man! First time I've seen those....
@CTmoog I used to be a tec. Worked on lot of vehicles you are working on now, but they were a lot newer. Thank you. I'm enjoying your channel.
What happen to the 1965 Beetle?
I have one f250 79
Que merda! Não termina um!!!!!
what is the tightening sequence for the big axle nut ?