CUCVLOVER
Active member
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- Location
- west Tennessee, just outside Milan
Why don't you put it in the running for MV of the month?
Just a thread.
Just a thread.
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Organization: ALARNG ELEMENT, JF HQThanks for the help CARNAC. I will make a donation the first of the month.
M1009 1986 Blazer
Vin: 1G8ED18J5GF184009
Registration: NFOKVM
NSN: 2320011232665
Bought at Rea Brothers Mid-South Auction Pearl, MS, last November , US Government-GSA public auction.
Can't find bumper numbers.
Thanks again.
Location: MONTGOMER ALABAMA
Nomenclature: TRUCK UTILITY 3/4TON
Model: M1009
NSN: 2320011232665
Serial Number: J5GF184009
Registration Number: NF0KVM
Year of Mfg: 1986
Manufacturer: 93219
Contract Number: DAAE07-82-C-4060
Usage Miles: 67350 Dec 03
It will be a WHOLE lot easier for you the next time when you use a puller to yank a steering wheel.Good work.
I didn't know that they made a steering wheel puller. (I guess I never asked).
I just used plenty of wd40 and a rubber hammer. It's not the best way but works.
That was a dirty trick. Were the "perps" ever caught and convicted?All of my CUCVs have the original keys. It doesn't make them easier to steal but it does make them easier to enter. After a local produce farmer had a number of his CUCV field trucks stolen and recovered without front axles, I learned that a few extra safeguards might be warranted. It will take much more than just a 73Y2 key to drive away with any of my junk.
No, they were not. At last count, several years ago, there were 4 trucks parked in the back with no front axles. He has long since got out of CUCVs and the trucks are all gone (found 2 in junk yards) but I surely remembered and implemented a few security measures with my stuff.That was a dirty trick. Were the "perps" ever caught and convicted?
Autozone if you have one in your area, will let you borrow one if you have a credit card. I've borrowed a gear puller from them before - as Ahab says, you will appreciate the difference between the right way and the hard wayIt will be a WHOLE lot easier for you the next time when you use a puller to yank a steering wheel... ...You might be able to rent them from some rental shops.
That's weird, most GMs I drove had a round body key and a square ignition key, and they weren't the same. Personally I don't really care if I have five keys to drive the same truck (fuel cap, tailgate, front doors, steering wheel lock, and ignition key). Makes it more likely I'll be the only one in the family driving it, and keeping it empty should keep people from breaking in.Before you install your new ignition lock, you can have a locksmith rekey it to match your new door locks. Now the same key will match your doors & ignition, just like the way GM built it.
Indeed, I have an idea for that, OpSec will prevent me from sharing...All of my CUCVs have the original keys. It doesn't make them easier to steal but it does make them easier to enter. After a local produce farmer had a number of his CUCV field trucks stolen and recovered without front axles, I learned that a few extra safeguards might be warranted. It will take much more than just a 73Y2 key to drive away with any of my junk.
Is there any trick to that sanding at all to get the final "like new" look?On that note, since it rapidly went pitch black and I wasn't about to dig out extension cords and flood lights to do 20 minutes of steering column work, I figured I'd tackle scraping, sanding and re-polishing the existing black out lights to see if they were salvageable. Used 1200grit to wet-sand the plastic lenses. Everything but the blackout drive should be able to be saved, the lens on the blackout drive light is cracked and mostly opaque around the bulb (little bit melted too).
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