Another successful day working on the truck! 3 little things and 1 big thing ticked off the list. The little things really help keep the motivation up. Little by little this thing is becoming EXACTLY what I want it to be, and I know all the little things are going to make me immensely happy in the future.
The first little thing was putting a low profile latch on the gas tank access panel. When I first installed the panel I hadn't really thought about the fact that it didn't have a handle of any kind on it to pull it open. I guess with it installed on a vertical wall you can just press on one end of it and it'll open. Not so much sitting flat on the floor...
So, McMaster-Carr to the rescue.
I found a sweet flush-mount latch that suits my needs perfectly. A bit of drilling later I had it installed. I did have to make a spacer out of some 1/8" ABS sheet I had around since the thinnest mounting material thickness for the latch was 1/8"-1/4" and the panel is about a 1/16".
The second little thing I did was install the hood brace kit I bought recently. The hood is in good shape currently, but I want to keep it that way, so braces gotta go on. I plan to spray the whole under side of the hood with Lizardskin insulation so the braces should blend right in when it's all the same color.
The third little thing I did was clean up and treat the rust where the rear quarter panel and barn door window seals had been. They probably got dried out in the Arizona sun and started letting water in. There were some bad areas, but fortunately nothing that had rotted through or affected the integrity of the metal in such a way that it would need body work. A little Corroseal on a foam brush later and all is well again.
And at last the big thing: I
finally got a door completely back together. These stupid things have been a helluva project. After figuring out how/where to install the electric motors for the windows and the electric lock poppers, and taking the '87 door apart to get the glass out of it, I realized that the track at the bottom of the glass from the '87 is wider than the track on the '73 window. Ugh. Fortunately, while looking through LMC for new window seals I found you can buy the correct size rollers to make the swap. The old ones just had to be drilled out, easy peasy. The new ones I guess you're supposed to be able to punch or vice down like a rivet, but I just ended up tacking them in with the welder.
After a fair amount of struggle getting the seals, glass and regulator back in the door, I finally got it all together, and I'm ecstatic to have the dark factory tint on these doors! With everything in I screwed it all together, including the new armrest pad. Love how it came out... now to do the other 3. FML.