Well, It is time to finally give you guys the update. I have been so busy with so many things, but first for the good. The truck is home, is healthy, and had no major breakdowns on the way down. I checked all fuel filters, all major rotating pieces, and on the drive would routinely feel the hubs for warmth. It was a 2 and a half day drive, and by the end of it I still loved the truck.... despite gaining a minor concussion on day 2. The truck was equipped with a springer seat, but the springer doesn't work correctly and can't be lowered or adjusted because the band has snapped. That means that most of the time the chair is as stiff as the passenger bench (That my fiance rode on for 3 days). When a large enough bump is found though, the seat loads up, and as the rest of the truck is going down off of the bump, the seat launches my arse straight into the steel bars that support the soft top. Long story short, I hit the bar 3 times before calling quits for the night and pulling over.
There is so little rust on the vehicle it boggles my mind, excluding the bed. A bit of history on my truck, it was at some point a support truck for an armament group, and started life as a fuel truck. It served in vietnam until the end of the war when it was brought back home. At some point between its creation in 1966 and 1982 when it was sent in for a depot day they changed it to a cargo bed. I am not sure why, but when I checked into the numbers on the truck the story checked out without without any stretch of the imagination.
Within a month of the truck coming home I had taken off the bumper and sanded down the worst of the rust on the truck and repainted it. The paint that was on it I left as much as I could because that paint is **** near indestructible to everything less than an angle grinder with a wire wheel. As of right now I am prioritizing what jobs need being done on it the most to keep it in healthy operating order. More on that in a minute. A few days after the bumper was remounted we found that the kick panel below the door concealed more rust than the rest of the truck had.... they will need replacing in a bit of time, but that isn't a load bearing surface and the rust is not spreading past them, so an angle grinder and a welder will be needed some time in the next year or so.
After we prettied up the cosmetics and did some serious checking on fluids, we ran it in a local car show where it took the peoples 1st place. People absolutely loved it, and we did a Sunday drive with over 150 other cars. Needless to say we were the biggest vehicle there. Unfortunately we did not place with the judges on the normal rankings at the car show. I think they are a bit biased though as 2 corvettes and a Challenger took the podiums. The last day of the car show the inevitable happened. A engine that hadn't had a head gasket change in 30+ years decided it wanted new head gaskets. Lucky me that the car show was only a few minutes from my home, and the exhaust cleared up after a few minutes of warm up. Initially I was worried that I had wet stacked my exhaust, but when I got to the house and ran it for a few minutes it started spewing steam out of the snot pipe.
Right now we are mid way through the head gasket change. I pulled the heads off this morning and discovered that the head gasket was made from cork-board and that there was 1 cylinder that was missing its fire ring. Needless to say it was also the cylinder that had failed, a break in they gasket from the coolant channel to the cylinder.
Beyond the head gasket change, we will be hi temperature painting everything we pull off after sand blasting. I also have two axle boots to repair. I am probably going to go with the solid boots, not the zipper ones, simply because they seem to last longer according to everyone, plus it will allow me to get a look at the condition of the knuckles and brakes. I will also be changing the oil and coolant out soon, and probably changing all 3 diff's fluids out. Mod's I am looking at doing are spin on conversions for both the fuel and oil filters, adding in a pyro before the turbo, adding a boost gauge, replacing the synchro ring on 4th gear, replacing the cracked copper line to my air governor, and fixing the springer seat.
PS. Good lord that Turbo was heavy. I expected the exhaust manifold to be the heavy part, but the turbo took the cake.