The truck definitely has sentimental value to it. My dad bought it with my grandma's GM discount the year i was born. So i rode around in that truck growing up. Since then my parents split up and this is one of the few things i have left with good memories. Even sitting in the cab listening to the clock make that funky noise puts a smile on my face.
I also love working on this type of stuff. And while restoring in steps, i can pay cash along the way. And i'm in the process of fixing the frame/body on my wife's '95 wrangler. And i have an almost 9 week old daughter that i'd love for her to see and help restore grandpa's old truck, as she grows up.
As of now, the plan is:
1. Buy new door shells (Brothertrucks has complete shells for $379 each or get cheaper foreign stamped ones for $152 each?)
2. Take the cab off the frame and my buddy will fix the rocker panels and cab corners for about $1,000-$1,200. But he wants the new doors on first, to make sure they don't rub. The current doors have rust on the bottom...
3. While the cab is off, sandblast the fame, weld in patches and truck bed liner it as much as i can.
4. Find a replacement short box, already have the tailgate.
5. Put the cab back on, maybe with a 1" body lift.
6. Replace the stock suspension with 1.5" lift.
7. Save up for amazing paint job or start upgrading the drive-train. Long term projects.
Mainly, i feel like i'm at a race against time to stop the rust. Then i can slow down a bit...