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An attempt at subtlety in a crowd of buffoons

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  • Imaeechew
    replied
    LOVE IT. My first car was a 64 SS, until someone ran a stop sign and t-boned me. My dad just finished restoring a 63 convertible last year. I have always wanted a wagon but I can't seem to find any in my neck of the woods.
    Can't wait to see what you do with this, Chevy 2's need some love

    Leave a comment:


  • DER E30
    replied
    Originally posted by gunchsta View Post
    Before this goes too far, for clarifications sake, the title of the thread refers to the muscle car 'anti-import' culture that has gaudy over done riced out muscle cars, then spends their days sitting in lawn chairs talking about how much better their muscle cars are than rice, and how the kids just aint' right. /rant.
    I 'd at this. I've seen it firsthand and it is pretty stupid!

    Looks good! Waiting for more to the story!

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  • gunchsta
    replied
    Once the heads came back from the machine shop, I buttoned the engine back up and took it back out for some more abuse. Well, I found the next weak link in the driveline...



    I was out bangin' gears and I grabbed 3rd a little too agressively and sheared a couple teeth off the input shaft of the manual trans that resided in the car at the time. This is also of 1965 vintage so I can't really be too upset after 50 years that it let go. I decided that because I wanted to do some drag racing, an automatic with a high-stall torque converter would be the most predictable and durable route to go, so the blown up 4 speed came out, and turbo 350 was fit in its place. Luckily for me the output shaft of the automatic was the same spline and same exact location as the 4 speed so I didn't have to modify the driveshaft, just bolt it in and go.

    the mighty th350 the first time it was re-built
    Last edited by gunchsta; 01-22-2015, 02:55 PM.

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  • gunchsta
    replied
    One night a buddy and I were driving around beating on the car and we stabbed the throttle, car went like stink for a second, then just fell on its face. We limped it home, and vowed to diagnose it in the morning.

    It didn't sound like anything extremely catastrophic but you never know...



    Now I knew. It had somehow broken a valve spring but didn't drop the valve!


    That seemed pretty cool to me. I mean it's a bummer a spring broke, but I'd been pretty hard on the ol girl for a few years, and on a total unknown of an engine it held up just fine. Small failure like this is no big deal.

    So I pulled the heads off and sent them out to be cleaned up, re surfaced, new valve guides, and of course new valve springs. This would turn out to be a mistake in the future, but at the time it seemed like the right thing to do. I had intentions of keeping the car 'vintage'

    here's what the engine bay looked like then... as you can see it's pretty sloppy. This was, admittedly, after I'd already "cleaned it up" once. There's always room for improvement right?

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  • gunchsta
    replied
    wheels always need to be changed right? I found a set of off-brand American torque-thrusts from way back when on craigslist for $50, so I snatched those up, polished the rim, and mounted them on the car for a while.




    14x6's baller status!

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  • gunchsta
    replied
    The next step at this point, the car was running strong (for a 1965 engine that was re-built who knows how long ago) so I thought it needed to be prettied up a bit. I found a neat set of cal-custom finned aluminum valve covers from the 60's and started to clean them up a bit. This is about half way through polishing


    after getting those cleaned up, and getting an intake manifold with a breather on it so I could use them, I pulled the engine and cleaned that up, re gasketed it, and painted it.

    on the stand before going back into the car


    going back in, or out, I can't remember which...


    Back in the car again, you'll notice the glass air cleaner is gone... well, no hood and a glass air cleaner lid got me a little nervous, so I decided to take that off for the time being.


    Last edited by gunchsta; 01-22-2015, 02:52 PM.

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  • gunchsta
    replied
    That year (2007 I believe) I took it to 'Back to the 50's' - the biggest vintage car show in Minnesota and had a blast. The show has a cut off of 1964 so I was excited to have something that I could get in with.

    I took this picture of the car in the rain at the show that I liked


    and I bought this neat old clear air cleaner. It was some gimmick from the 60's that would allow you to 'better tune your carburetor' because you could see into it as it was running... the lid was glass. I'm quite certain it was the lid to a pan with an air filter and a base


    Sometime later that summer I also came across this neat 70's tachometer, so I hooked that up and it even still worked. The needle was a little lazy, but it moved and functioned, and it looked 'correct' to me so I ran with it for a while.

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  • gunchsta
    replied
    Originally posted by Azrial89 View Post
    Another Minnesotan and a Wagon, automatically a fan. I really like what you have done under the hood, very sanitary. Would love to see more of this thing.
    Thanks!

    Originally posted by _e90 View Post
    That's a really clean engine bay .. Wouldn't have expected it from the outside, to be honest. Nicely done. Do you have anything else planned for it? Maybe some wider wheels/tires on the back?
    That's exactly what I was hoping for- the goal with this car has always been to keep the outside modest and the drivetrain/suspension stout. I'm not a fan of the over emphasized "sleeper" term, but I wanted my car to surprise people.

    before this goes too far, for clarifications sake, the title of the thread refers to the muscle car 'anti-import' culture that has gaudy over done riced out muscle cars, then spends their days sitting in lawn chairs talking about how much better their muscle cars are than rice, and how the kids just aint' right. /rant.

    Anyhow, like I said I've always wanted this car to be subtle on the outside, but have high performance goodies underneath and be able to surprise some of the more modern stuff on the road. The story goes (told by the previous owner of the car when I bought it 7 years ago) that this car was sitting in a junkyard in arizona or new mexico, ontop of another car, waiting to be crushed. A friend called a friend called a friend and before too long it was down from the crusher pile (by way of forklift if the underside of the rockers tells me anything) and on its way to the cold north. Previous owner gets it in running condition with parts from a 65 (converting it to a v8 and 5 lug wheels) and the help of his son. Well, time went on and the son lost interest, so the car sat. Until I came and took it off his hands. To this day I still think I paid a lot for it, but these cars are relatively rare in a wagon, and certainly rare as rust free as this one is.

    I have some pictures that I can add later of it in the very early stages of ressurrection, but for now I'm going to try to start as early on the timeline as I can and fill in the rest later.

    first order of business was to re-build the drum brakes (all 4 corners!) that locked one wheel and caused the car to dive hard right with the application of the pedal


    once that was accomplished the side trim needed some detailing

    and the other side


    with the brakes fixed and the trim cleaned up, the car seemed presentable enough to cruise around town and run errands in.


    That's how I cruised it around for a while, and I was relatively satisfied.

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  • _e90
    replied
    That's a really clean engine bay .. Wouldn't have expected it from the outside, to be honest. Nicely done. Do you have anything else planned for it? Maybe some wider wheels/tires on the back?

    Leave a comment:


  • Azrial89
    replied
    Another Minnesotan and a Wagon, automatically a fan. I really like what you have done under the hood, very sanitary. Would love to see more of this thing.

    Leave a comment:


  • gunchsta
    replied
    63 Nova

    - I should also note that I've upgraded nearly every part of the drivetrain and suspension. It would have originally had an anemic inline 6 cylinder and a 3 speed manual transmission on the column. It now has a v8, 3 speed automatic, and an upgraded rear end/differential. In 2013 the car made 325hp to the rear wheels and ran 12.8 in the quarter mile pulling the front left tire 6".
    Last edited by gunchsta; 01-21-2015, 11:14 AM.

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  • loekaaz
    replied
    What is it? I'm European Nova wagon?

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  • gunchsta
    started a topic An attempt at subtlety in a crowd of buffoons

    An attempt at subtlety in a crowd of buffoons

    I've been lurking this site for a long time, and I've gotten countless ideas and motivations for my build, although it isn't specifically "stanced" by any stretch of the imagination. It is lowered, it does have bigger and wider wheels and tires that it would have from the factory, but the fitment is by no means as precise as most cars on here.

    I guess I would like to extend my gratitude to this authors and photographers that are a part of this website for giving me something to study to in the cold dark that is winter in Minnesota.

    I would also like to share the process of assembling and modifying my car to it's current state with you all, if you're interested. Like I said before it is not the poster-child for stance, but I have tried hard to do clean, subtle, and unique modifications that aren't as common in the 'muscle car' scene.

    Enough rambling, here's a couple pictures, I have tons more I can share if there's interest, if not I am completely happy settling back into the background as an avid lurker.



    Underhood



    Thanks for looking!
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