Vbb199
B-rate Hillbilly Customs
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2018
- Posts
- 9,045
- Reaction score
- 15,336
- Location
- Salisbury NC
- First Name
- Vince
- Truck Year
- 89, 79
- Truck Model
- 89 Suburban R1500, 79 C10
- Engine Size
- 350, 502
So, some of you may or may not have seen me say, that my 89 r1500 suburban was purchased by my dad when it was a couple years old.
It's got a strong very low mileage HO350 in it now, 700r4 with a shift kit now, factory tranny and oil cooler, 3.42 rear, power everything, rear ac and heat, 3rd row seat.
He always wanted to do 2 things to it.
A 3/4 Ton conversion, and cab lights.
I have a complete cab light setup off a parts truck burb and I planned on just cutting out a section of the roof in the parts truck as a template so I can cut the cab light holes out perfectly.
That's not hard.
I now have a 14 bolt rear end that came from a k20/c20 with 3/4 Ton springs on it, 3.73 geared. And dad's got a torch cut 3/4 front half of a frame off a 2wd burb, he's also got 8 lug wagon wheels that would work fine for my 31x10.5x15 tires.
I might would even convert the drum 14 bolt to disc brake in the process, upgrade the master cylinder to a bigger one as well.
All the pieces are available here to do this amount of work, I would just obviously need to do new balljoints, steering linkage, some sort of bs for the rear spring hangers that I can't remember, change rear driveline yokes, and get different drive/driven gears for the 700r4 with the gear change.
If anyone's been watching, this kinda work wouldn't be hard at all for me, just would time and dedication, and patience, not to mention I would need a temp truck while I do the work.
Any suggestions? Pitfalls I may encounter?
I don't want to hear "just buy a 3/4 Ton burb", constructive advice would be appreciated.
This is almost a completely rust free truck, and the sentimental value of it alone just cannot be replaced. THIS IS the truck I want to be driving, not some alternate rust bucket bs.
Basically I'm asking, if someone has an objection, or if this will take more work than what I'm thinking.
I could have that front end converted to 3/4 Ton in a weekend if I have all the parts and people will leave me tf alone LOL
It's got a strong very low mileage HO350 in it now, 700r4 with a shift kit now, factory tranny and oil cooler, 3.42 rear, power everything, rear ac and heat, 3rd row seat.
He always wanted to do 2 things to it.
A 3/4 Ton conversion, and cab lights.
I have a complete cab light setup off a parts truck burb and I planned on just cutting out a section of the roof in the parts truck as a template so I can cut the cab light holes out perfectly.
That's not hard.
I now have a 14 bolt rear end that came from a k20/c20 with 3/4 Ton springs on it, 3.73 geared. And dad's got a torch cut 3/4 front half of a frame off a 2wd burb, he's also got 8 lug wagon wheels that would work fine for my 31x10.5x15 tires.
I might would even convert the drum 14 bolt to disc brake in the process, upgrade the master cylinder to a bigger one as well.
All the pieces are available here to do this amount of work, I would just obviously need to do new balljoints, steering linkage, some sort of bs for the rear spring hangers that I can't remember, change rear driveline yokes, and get different drive/driven gears for the 700r4 with the gear change.
If anyone's been watching, this kinda work wouldn't be hard at all for me, just would time and dedication, and patience, not to mention I would need a temp truck while I do the work.
Any suggestions? Pitfalls I may encounter?
I don't want to hear "just buy a 3/4 Ton burb", constructive advice would be appreciated.
This is almost a completely rust free truck, and the sentimental value of it alone just cannot be replaced. THIS IS the truck I want to be driving, not some alternate rust bucket bs.
Basically I'm asking, if someone has an objection, or if this will take more work than what I'm thinking.
I could have that front end converted to 3/4 Ton in a weekend if I have all the parts and people will leave me tf alone LOL
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