So today I ended up finishing what I started last Saturday. The squeaky serpentine belt was driving me insane, so I yanked the serpentine setup and put the old v-belt accessories back on. However, not without much cursing, spitting, fighting, hitting, and praying. When I pulled the v-belt accessories, I had no intention of ever using them again, so I paid no attention to how they came off, or more specifically, how they'd go back together. I couldn't for the life of me figure out how to put this power steering pump back in using the brackets and bolts I had. I searched the internet for an image and couldn't find one anywhere. I found similar, but they were all different. I spent at least a couple hours trying to get it in and everything lined back up but it just wasn't working. Knuckles bleeding, ego bruised, and head pounding, I started looking at pictures I'd taken to see if I could zoom into any old engine pics i had and maybe I'd be able to figure it out, when lo and behold, the image I'd been searching for. I'd taken it when I got the truck and didn't realize it.
Then I was walking around the truck, thinking of how awful the rust is, and just figuring things out, when I opened the drivers door and thought, "Man, this thing is loose." Let me tell you, I could not believe what a HUGE difference it made to just tighten up the doors by adjusting the strikers! The inside of this thing is actually quiet enough to carry on a normal conversation now at speed on the road! With no belt squeal and no door rattling this thing is actually a pleasure to drive!
And finally, I've been saving this for a while. I found it in a old Scout 800 in a junkyard many years ago and have been wanting to put it in the Blazer ever since I got it. My 10/22 (or just about any other rifle) fits in there quite nicely, right behind the driver's seat, completely secure, accessible enough, and otherwise out of sight.