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It looks like a great father/son project. I just recently did one with my son.
I’d recommend dropping in a carbureted 350 or going with a 350/355 crate eng
Im really struggling with direction of body work! Did you do alot. I took it to a local body shop; he suggested take cab off truck and have it blasted. I guess that would be a frame off retore?? Not sure by budget will allow that and I don't want to work on it for 5 years.
That was my initial plan; The 305 does run good, carb floods, but I bought a new edelbrock carburetor to swap out the factory one. The old timer that owned it prior has capped off all kinds if vacuum lines on the carb and I know nothing about carbs. I have a friend that was going to swap it out for me, and then go from there. Its hard to start now and once you drive somewhere it will flood out and leave you stranded. That's what started the "if it was mine I would LS swap it"; but I agree with you about keeping it old school! Thats why I bought it, my first vehicle was a 1984 GMC Sierra, with a 305 and 4 speed manual(it was a beast).@Kevin Hays What to do. Well that's all up to you. Lots of folks are going to have different ideas. I know what I would do, if that 305 is in good health I'd get it going and run it. Why because I love these old trucks and the old technology in them. My truck has a 305 in, and when it's done I'll likely put a 350 in it, maybe possibly I might do a vortec but only if a vortec were to fall in my lap for cheap. No way I'd ever LS it. To me when new technology like an LS is put in one of these trucks it ruins the old school flavor. But that's just me and we are all different. In the end it's your truck and should do what you want.
Remember if your swapping to and Edelbrock, that if your truck has the 700R4 transmission the geometry on the TV cable has to be correct or you can damage the transmission.That was my initial plan; The 305 does run good, carb floods, but I bought a new edelbrock carburetor to swap out the factory one. The old timer that owned it prior has capped off all kinds if vacuum lines on the carb and I know nothing about carbs. I have a friend that was going to swap it out for me, and then go from there. Its hard to start now and once you drive somewhere it will flood out and leave you stranded. That's what started the "if it was mine I would LS swap it"; but I agree with you about keeping it old school! Thats why I bought it, my first vehicle was a 1984 GMC Sierra, with a 305 and 4 speed manual(it was a beast).
And thats insane!!!You should be able to get 5 000 out of it , It's too far away for Me. That truck would bring round 7000 here in rust bucket Pa.
I like the old saying "Run what ya brung!" in other words just keep what you have, work on one thing at a time. If you can, spend some time going around the truck and make a list of things it needs, and then prioritize that list. Then, one thing at a time. New carb is great and all, but what about rebuilding the one that's on there and then replacing all the vacuum lines and making sure they're routed correctly? And who cares if it's a 305, 350, or whatever. It'll get down the road. Just get it running, driving, and dependable, then work on the cosmetics as time, money, and skill allow. This thread is full of great suggestions about that stuff.