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The floor in my 79 has quite a few holes so me and my father were thinkin of replacing the floor panels and making new panels for the panels you cant buy and whatnot but then we thought why not rip out the whole floor, get the mold, and make a totally new floor out of fiberglass. It will be extremely strong and never rot again. Anyone do this or have opinions/thoughts on it? Good idea? bad idea? Gimmy some thoughts lol i personally think it would be a good idea, then just coat it with black paint and put a polyvinyl molded floor mat over it
Its going to be glassed in. I was thinking of welding angle iron all around the edge of the cab to give it something to bond to at the edges and also I will be putting in new cross members as they are rusted out in some spots now
Personally I don't like the sound of mating fiberglass to steel, but thats just me, it may work out just fine. If it were me, I would have the floor panels cut out and replaced with steel ones and put a good primer and paint job on it. Good luck in whatever you decide.
Does anywhere sell the metal for the floor right under the rear window? The window has been leaking and theres a large hole rusted through the floor almost all the way across the back, behind the seat.
I think you would have to fabricate that. If your cab is in that bad of shape, you may want to consider another one. I dont know where you are but I was at a junkyard yesterday that had 5-6 '73-'79 cabs and at least 2 of them were in good shape, could be had there cheap too. Search the classifieds here on fte, there were several for sale, you will be $ and aggravation ahead it sounds like.
my cab was patched and rusted badly so i went an found a cab at a u pull it yard price was$175 but they were having a 50% off sale i paid $88 an spent a half a day pulling it. when it came time to swap cabs i found out that my old cab was held to the frame by one of the back cab mounts the rest had rusted away. finding another cab was the best solution for me. just make sure you look where rust could be there plenty of doner trucks out there
Like Matty, my 79 F250 has some rust spots about 6 inches by 10 inches.
I plan to cut out all the rust and thin metal, sand surface rust and then prime with some Rust Converter from Mar-Hyde. Then I plan to Herculine the interior of the truck (I've taken everything out, taped over seat belt holes, etc...). Afterwards I figure on patching the holes with some diamond plate sheet metal. Of course I would use the Mar-Hyde on the underside of the cab where rust was present. I want to make my baby bombproof, not cherry.
Sound crazy or okay? Again, working on a medium budget.
Rezvani's Latest Post-Apocalyptic Monster Is a Ford F-150 Raptor Underneath
Slideshow: Called the Fortress, the 850-horsepower pickup combines Raptor underpinnings with military-inspired features, survival equipment, and a starting price of $285,000.