Ratch
Member
- 586
- 5
- 18
- Location
- Chester County, PA
I checked the TM section and this one, could not find one for the M715. Anyone have a link, or maybe better eyes than I?
No pics on the PC I'm using right now, but I will try to get a few up soon.
I was offered it in trade, and had never heard of it. I was talked into it...
It's pretty much a mess. I'm still not sure if it was a good deal for me or not.
It sat in one spot for maybe 20 years (I'm guessing, I forget what the previous owner said). It has 1968-1970 tires on it in very bad shape.
Lots of rust, but I'm a little amazed at how everything is freeing up with some time soaking in oil. The hood hinges would barely move, but a few shots of fogging oil, and I can open and close it with one arm now.
One tire was stuck when I got it, but I freed it up and the thing rolls way too easy. No parking brake, so the wheels are chocked. It's parked on a hill. That was a lot of fun...
The cab has holes all over the place, but the rest of the truck is not terrible. The top is rotted and torn, so it lets in rain, thus rusting from the inside out.
The fuel pump was sort of swapped at some point in it's life, and never completed, so there's a mess of steel lines I'll have to figure out. As I learn more on the forum, I might just leave the current pump in place for it's vacuum function, and install an electric pump on the frame or tank.
The brakes are non-existent; the pedal goes to the floor as if it's not even connected. I ordered a new dual circuit MC, and 4 new wheel cylinders, we'll get those on first...
I was afraid to turn the engine before getting the plugs out and squirting some oil in the cylinders to soak for a few days, but I got one plug out and it looked almost fresh, with no corrosion, so I gave the fan a light twist, and the motor turns freely. I'm glad for that, because the mil plug wires are a *nightmare* to get a wrench on. This thing might keep it's plugs forever...
So I'll check the wiring, hook up a battery, and tap the starter a few times to circulate the oil, then give it a split second of ether to see if it will actually run.
If it doesn't, that's ok, I have a good history with Chevy 350's, and I like that the transfer case is divorced, makes transmission choices a little wider.
My kids love it. Wife hates it. I'm still on the fence, but definitely warming up. This is the kind of vehicle that you can really do anything you want with.
I'm not a purist, and I don't see much value in restoration to original for this vehicle. If we keep it, the intention will be to make it a street legal offroading truck that the boys and I take on trips. And it will no doubt haul a few sheets of plywood, etc, from Lowes on occasion...
No pics on the PC I'm using right now, but I will try to get a few up soon.
I was offered it in trade, and had never heard of it. I was talked into it...
It's pretty much a mess. I'm still not sure if it was a good deal for me or not.
It sat in one spot for maybe 20 years (I'm guessing, I forget what the previous owner said). It has 1968-1970 tires on it in very bad shape.
Lots of rust, but I'm a little amazed at how everything is freeing up with some time soaking in oil. The hood hinges would barely move, but a few shots of fogging oil, and I can open and close it with one arm now.
One tire was stuck when I got it, but I freed it up and the thing rolls way too easy. No parking brake, so the wheels are chocked. It's parked on a hill. That was a lot of fun...
The cab has holes all over the place, but the rest of the truck is not terrible. The top is rotted and torn, so it lets in rain, thus rusting from the inside out.
The fuel pump was sort of swapped at some point in it's life, and never completed, so there's a mess of steel lines I'll have to figure out. As I learn more on the forum, I might just leave the current pump in place for it's vacuum function, and install an electric pump on the frame or tank.
The brakes are non-existent; the pedal goes to the floor as if it's not even connected. I ordered a new dual circuit MC, and 4 new wheel cylinders, we'll get those on first...
I was afraid to turn the engine before getting the plugs out and squirting some oil in the cylinders to soak for a few days, but I got one plug out and it looked almost fresh, with no corrosion, so I gave the fan a light twist, and the motor turns freely. I'm glad for that, because the mil plug wires are a *nightmare* to get a wrench on. This thing might keep it's plugs forever...
So I'll check the wiring, hook up a battery, and tap the starter a few times to circulate the oil, then give it a split second of ether to see if it will actually run.
If it doesn't, that's ok, I have a good history with Chevy 350's, and I like that the transfer case is divorced, makes transmission choices a little wider.
My kids love it. Wife hates it. I'm still on the fence, but definitely warming up. This is the kind of vehicle that you can really do anything you want with.
I'm not a purist, and I don't see much value in restoration to original for this vehicle. If we keep it, the intention will be to make it a street legal offroading truck that the boys and I take on trips. And it will no doubt haul a few sheets of plywood, etc, from Lowes on occasion...