AmericaOverland
Explorer
So, Stephanie, I must apologize first to you. Second, my advice would be this; Find a COMPETENT shop for your Scout II, then seek out or have them provide references. By that I mean customers that have had major or similar work you are seeking that has been completed by said shop. I would engage them about the quality of work, timeliness as well as cost.
So, in short, sorry if I mislead, I was projecting my own pain onto Stephanie's good idea. -- Hey, Scouts have dana 44 axles front and rear
Well, the way my build has gone was I went to what was then www.binderbulletin.com which shut down for some reason and came back as www.binderplanet.com a few weeks later with just about all the tech threads and photos restored. I met a few people online there and met some in person in public gatherings and even went to a couple of wrench days once I got to know the people wouldn't sawsall me and put me in the freezer. Early on, I met someone from Dallas who is currently my truck builder.
In March 2009, I talked with the builder about what I wanted (stock, except for different wheels, seats, borgeson steering joint, bedlining instead of carpet, no sliding windows in the hardtop, engine work, transmission work, differential work, springs, rust damage repair on body and top, seals for windows, basically everything - a bit of custom work), and we had a time table of completion. We did the original agreement on paper, notarized and signed for each payment, and when I realized it was going to take more work as time went on, I then started using Pay Pal to pay for the extra work beyond the contract, specifying exactly what each payment was for.
I then learned as a newbie that restorations seem to take twice as long and cost twice as much as I would think, and that's probably because I had an unrealistic expectation of costs. I thought that I would have a decent-looking, mechanically solid truck for about $5,000. It ended up being around $9,500 so far and nearly 5 months late. Next time, I would budget tentatively for $10-15 grand, and go from there. Delivery is supposed to be around Feb. 9th.
What is helping me on my side is the Gulf Coast Binders people here in SE Texas have been watching my build very closely on the binder web site and advising the builder on certain things.
I am thinking that when it's time to do another restoration on the Scout, I will talk with an actual, real shop. And I know of several in town plus those reputable ones around the country that specialize in IH vehicle/tractor restorations. Hopefully by then, my income and credit history will be more established. An upgrade would be something like a diesel engine/manual transmission/t-case combo (if it hasn't been outlawed by then) with whatever rust work becomes evident by then. I'm much more familiar with the Scout than anything else out there, since I've been researching it along with problem areas to watch out for.
This Scout is one of not too many out there that came out with a hollow tube front axle, so it is 2WD. If it turns out that I'm able to afford getting further and further off the road, then I may look into the driveline changeout or simply replace my car with another Scout.
Stephanie