mtm_motors
Observer
My cousin and I bought an Avion camper a while back and finally found a home for it, in a 1971 Dodge W200 Power Wagon. It came from the factory (and still has) a Dana 44HD front, Dana 60 rear, NP435 trans, a divorced transfer case (I don't remember the model) and a PTO output all driven by a mighty 225CID Slant 6. We got the truck from a college buddy of mine in running condition, just needed brakes and a few things here and there to get on the road.
We hauled the truck with Evan's OBS F250 and it did well for the nearly 2000 miles we racked up over a week.
We had some trouble getting the clutch to engage (the truck had been sitting for a few years) and it was pretty late by the time we got it loaded up and strapped down.
Evan washed it up and and got the brakes working. It just needed a master cylinder and a good bleed.
The truck is very complete, but was missing some small trim here and there. The gas pedal was shot and luckily I was able to find a brand new one. Parts are hard to find for these years of Dodges, more so than Ford and Chevy. There are a couple companies that specialize in them and they have been invaluable.
My buddy had started working on the heat box and had a brand new heater core for it, but parked the truck and never got around to getting it together. Evan cleaned and painted up the heater box before he put it back together.
Finally, the truck was drivable!
Evan is currently working on mounting a beefy homemade grille guard that came with the truck. It doesn't look like it was for this truck, but the lines and style seem correct for a Sweptline truck. Eventually he will build a better bumper for it to mount on.
We hauled the truck with Evan's OBS F250 and it did well for the nearly 2000 miles we racked up over a week.
We had some trouble getting the clutch to engage (the truck had been sitting for a few years) and it was pretty late by the time we got it loaded up and strapped down.
Evan washed it up and and got the brakes working. It just needed a master cylinder and a good bleed.
The truck is very complete, but was missing some small trim here and there. The gas pedal was shot and luckily I was able to find a brand new one. Parts are hard to find for these years of Dodges, more so than Ford and Chevy. There are a couple companies that specialize in them and they have been invaluable.
My buddy had started working on the heat box and had a brand new heater core for it, but parked the truck and never got around to getting it together. Evan cleaned and painted up the heater box before he put it back together.
Finally, the truck was drivable!
Evan is currently working on mounting a beefy homemade grille guard that came with the truck. It doesn't look like it was for this truck, but the lines and style seem correct for a Sweptline truck. Eventually he will build a better bumper for it to mount on.