Delicious Clint
New member
- 15
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- 0
- Location
- Portland, OR
Howdy all --
I'd read a lot on this forum before jumping into this project and want to relay the story in thanks to all of you who put up such valuable information and take the time to answer questions from those of us who aren't knowledgeable.
I'm in Portland, OR today with my 1965 M109A2 parked happily in front of the house (much to the chagrin of my neighbors, I imagine). My buddy Andy and I picked her up in Raleigh, North Carolina sixteen days ago and after a long day at Delks Surplus Depot in Asheboro, NC spent an amazing fourteen days driving 3500 miles home.
I've got to give props to Triangle Truck Repair in Cary, NC for new brake lines and great hospitality when we arrived -- they also put new rubber on and did a thorough job of inspecting the vehicle, lubricating and prepping her for a big job. She ran the Blue Ridge Parkway like a 15,000 lb sportscar (my apologies to anyone behind us) and crossed the Great Plains with grace. Our slowest moment came in the Tetons of Wyoming (14mph up a 12% grade) while our fastest was 57mph on a steep downhill with the wind in back of us and both of us spitting over our shoulders.
We crossed the Mississippi River on a raft at Modoc, Illinois and discovered the little hamlet of Ste. Genevieve; drank in the Badlands at a biker dive (look for the double wide trailer with a sign in Wanblee SD); woke up in the midst of an endless sage and cactus prairie in Wyoming. An awesome trip and a fantastic start to the project. I'll be looking for help here, I'm sure! Step one, though, is to redo the rotted fittings around the windows in the cab and make it less of a "washing machine" experience to drive in the rain!
Oh, and a quick plug here for the Peltor Bluetooth headsets -- noise-cancelling when you're on the phone and great noise reduction. Also, should anyone try this at home, we found that gel-filled wheelchair seats make a great addition to the stock "padding on steel" approach, outperforming every other effort.
Now if my eyes would just quit vibrating....
Cheers,
I'd read a lot on this forum before jumping into this project and want to relay the story in thanks to all of you who put up such valuable information and take the time to answer questions from those of us who aren't knowledgeable.
I'm in Portland, OR today with my 1965 M109A2 parked happily in front of the house (much to the chagrin of my neighbors, I imagine). My buddy Andy and I picked her up in Raleigh, North Carolina sixteen days ago and after a long day at Delks Surplus Depot in Asheboro, NC spent an amazing fourteen days driving 3500 miles home.
I've got to give props to Triangle Truck Repair in Cary, NC for new brake lines and great hospitality when we arrived -- they also put new rubber on and did a thorough job of inspecting the vehicle, lubricating and prepping her for a big job. She ran the Blue Ridge Parkway like a 15,000 lb sportscar (my apologies to anyone behind us) and crossed the Great Plains with grace. Our slowest moment came in the Tetons of Wyoming (14mph up a 12% grade) while our fastest was 57mph on a steep downhill with the wind in back of us and both of us spitting over our shoulders.
We crossed the Mississippi River on a raft at Modoc, Illinois and discovered the little hamlet of Ste. Genevieve; drank in the Badlands at a biker dive (look for the double wide trailer with a sign in Wanblee SD); woke up in the midst of an endless sage and cactus prairie in Wyoming. An awesome trip and a fantastic start to the project. I'll be looking for help here, I'm sure! Step one, though, is to redo the rotted fittings around the windows in the cab and make it less of a "washing machine" experience to drive in the rain!
Oh, and a quick plug here for the Peltor Bluetooth headsets -- noise-cancelling when you're on the phone and great noise reduction. Also, should anyone try this at home, we found that gel-filled wheelchair seats make a great addition to the stock "padding on steel" approach, outperforming every other effort.
Now if my eyes would just quit vibrating....
Cheers,