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Now that the paperwork seems to be behind me it is time to start restoration of serial number 10.
The plan is to to strip it down to the bare chassis, strip and repaint everything, I plan to re-use every serviceable part not to save money but to keep it as original as possible.
The front end is in fair shape and is really easy to remove so the plan is to clean it up and use as is for now, of course looking it over very carefully and rebuilding the brakes/bearings etc.
Speaking of brakes all the components will be re-built/inspected and or replaced.
The trans will get a "refresh" with new seals, gaskets etc, very happy to have the original modified transmission.
The engine will get a complete re-build, it looks to be in fair condition, very clean inside and seems to have good compression, if it were any other project I would see if it would run but not on this one, I will re-use any serviceable part I can and anything that needs to be replaced will be the same spec as it has now, again very lucky to have at least the engine it had when sold by DRMO if not the original.
I will "blueprint" the engine during disassembly, checking cam timing/duration/lift, bore/stroke, CC the heads, check deck height and calculate compression ratio etc.
I plan on taking it back to when it was with the 9th infantry division circa 1982-3 after the first round of modifications, this includes removing ALL the bastardization that was done by the DOE in Nevada, restoring the chassis and dash they cut out and removing that hideous weapons mount they added.
It will be painted in MERDC colors, many restorations I see are in CARC which is fine but at least #10 was originally painted in MERDC as I have found that the first layer over the original black was 34079, the picture is close but to the eye it is an exact match.
I actually need a few days to clean/clear the shop before all the butt holes and elbows get to thrashing around, I did remove the seats today which are trash.
I am extremely fortunate that this sat for the last 25-30 years or more in Nevada, many FAVs have serious corrosion issues with the chassis, chrome moly may sound like a metal that would not easily rust but it is actually very happy to rust even though the black coating the factory gave it originally I have only been able to remove with a propane torch, no paint stripper I have tried does anything to it.
I am going to deviate on the wiring, the Army in Ft Lewis modified and installed a M151 wiring harness and it is complete crap, they may have had some very good craftsmen in the Ft. Lewis "skunk works" (what the base personnel called the hanger where the FAVs were modified for Army use) but they were evidently all metal smiths and weapons experts, not a decent electrician among them. that harness is the ugliest bastardization I have ever seen, I will build a proper harness with all asphalt loom like I did on the DuraVee...
I also I think I have actually figured out why the former owner put so few miles on it, one of the half shaft boots was bad and the CV joint burned up, when he tried to replace it he busted off two of the flange bolts and that is evidently where all the fun stopped.
EDIT the chassis may actually be "tweaked" the right front lift pad lacks an inch or so from touching the bottom of the chassis and the right basket has over an inch more clearance to the lift arm than the left side, they beat these things up pretty good...
The plan is to to strip it down to the bare chassis, strip and repaint everything, I plan to re-use every serviceable part not to save money but to keep it as original as possible.
The front end is in fair shape and is really easy to remove so the plan is to clean it up and use as is for now, of course looking it over very carefully and rebuilding the brakes/bearings etc.
Speaking of brakes all the components will be re-built/inspected and or replaced.
The trans will get a "refresh" with new seals, gaskets etc, very happy to have the original modified transmission.
The engine will get a complete re-build, it looks to be in fair condition, very clean inside and seems to have good compression, if it were any other project I would see if it would run but not on this one, I will re-use any serviceable part I can and anything that needs to be replaced will be the same spec as it has now, again very lucky to have at least the engine it had when sold by DRMO if not the original.
I will "blueprint" the engine during disassembly, checking cam timing/duration/lift, bore/stroke, CC the heads, check deck height and calculate compression ratio etc.
I plan on taking it back to when it was with the 9th infantry division circa 1982-3 after the first round of modifications, this includes removing ALL the bastardization that was done by the DOE in Nevada, restoring the chassis and dash they cut out and removing that hideous weapons mount they added.
It will be painted in MERDC colors, many restorations I see are in CARC which is fine but at least #10 was originally painted in MERDC as I have found that the first layer over the original black was 34079, the picture is close but to the eye it is an exact match.
I actually need a few days to clean/clear the shop before all the butt holes and elbows get to thrashing around, I did remove the seats today which are trash.
I am extremely fortunate that this sat for the last 25-30 years or more in Nevada, many FAVs have serious corrosion issues with the chassis, chrome moly may sound like a metal that would not easily rust but it is actually very happy to rust even though the black coating the factory gave it originally I have only been able to remove with a propane torch, no paint stripper I have tried does anything to it.
I am going to deviate on the wiring, the Army in Ft Lewis modified and installed a M151 wiring harness and it is complete crap, they may have had some very good craftsmen in the Ft. Lewis "skunk works" (what the base personnel called the hanger where the FAVs were modified for Army use) but they were evidently all metal smiths and weapons experts, not a decent electrician among them. that harness is the ugliest bastardization I have ever seen, I will build a proper harness with all asphalt loom like I did on the DuraVee...
I also I think I have actually figured out why the former owner put so few miles on it, one of the half shaft boots was bad and the CV joint burned up, when he tried to replace it he busted off two of the flange bolts and that is evidently where all the fun stopped.
EDIT the chassis may actually be "tweaked" the right front lift pad lacks an inch or so from touching the bottom of the chassis and the right basket has over an inch more clearance to the lift arm than the left side, they beat these things up pretty good...
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