At
long last, I am extremely happy to say we are fully up and running in our new
shop and FINALLY back to work on the Boss 302 project in earnest. But before we cover the latest progress on
the Boss, a quick overview of the last year or so in in order.
As
many of you know, several circumstances and events of the last 2 years have
conspired to consume most (ok…..almost ALL) of the time that would normally be
dedicated to the ongoing build of our custom 1970 Boss 302 Mustang. The domino effect began with the untimely
passing of my uncle in April of 2014 from the ravages of cancers brought on by
exposure to Agent Orange during his service in Viet Nam in the late 60’s. This event required a rather sudden
re-evaluation of just about everything going on in our home and existing work
space to be able to accommodate the enormous amount of his belongings that were
left to me on his passing. Most
significant in this was his prized 1932 Ford 5-window coupe; a Henry steel,
real-deal gem that was a fixture in our home town in deep southern Texas since
some time back in the late 40’s to early 50’s when my dad and uncle were youngsters.
Suddenly,
the undeniable need for a new work space became the absolute priority and the
only way we were going to be able to afford it was to build it ourselves. Particularly since I had a lot of unique and otherwise
rather costly features I wanted to incorporate along with construction details
I was unwilling to compromise as well. So, in the summer of 2015, we began the
long process of constructing a new shop to accommodate everything we needed and
to provide a comfortable, albeit still undersized, work area that could now be
dedicated to the current and future car building endeavors.
All
told my dad and I, with the help a small handful of wonderful friends, my two son-in-law’s,
and a few excellent pros, the structure was completed in about 4 months with
the remaining interior finish work and details taking an additional 6 months or
so to get everything “move-in” ready by our April 2016 deadline.
As
April 2016 came, my good friend Bob (a true friend and soldier!) and I made the
trip to East Texas to pull off a marathon 3-day pack-‘n-load effort (with
amazing help from Gay, Midge, Jesse, & Jim!), of all of my Uncle’s wares
and “The Coupe”. With everything
road-ready, we made our way back to Michigan with everything and ourselves in
one piece.
The
next four months were spent sorting EVERYTHING and putting things in their
respective places so we could see the beautiful new floor again! This felt like just about as much work as
building the shop in the first place!
But, with perseverance, everything found its place and we were able to move
the remaining cars and parts into the shop for the last time. A few remaining smaller projects were
completed to add a bit more functionality to the space and we found ourselves
well into November 2016, and the first opportunity to actually refocus on car
building in a year. So there you have it……..the
short version!
The "storage" side of the new shop..........already FULL! |
Installing the Rear 4-Link Suspension
Assembly
Getting
back into the swing of things was a welcome and relatively painless
process. Funny how it always seems to
work that way when you LOVE what you’re doing!
The
rear axle and suspension had been essentially finished quite some time ago with
only a few small details remaining to wrap up before it was ready to
install. First, I didn’t like the
configuration of the brake “hard” line on the axle and decided to make a new
one before the axle could go under the car.
I have gotten rather picky about hard line plumbing and while the first
line looked plenty passable, it just wasn’t providing the “look” I wanted, so
there was no choice but to scrap it and make a new one.
Once
the brake plumbing was to spec, I installed the new rear brake calipers and
brackets, along with fresh brake pads to round out the entire assembly. At this point, there was nothing left but to
install the entire works in the car and see how it all looked!
Installation
was rather easy given the fact that, by this time, I had assembled and disassembled
this system roughly a dozen times in fabrication and mock-up, so there was
little doubt everything would drop it with little fanfare. And so it was; everything installed with
little conflict and in the course of a few hours, the axle was centered in the
chassis and in the wheel openings (a nice bonus feature of a fully adjustable
rear suspension!).
A shot of the right side panhard mount and coilover. Everything really looks tidy and business-like. |
Left side coilover and panhard mounting detail. |
So,
for our first shot of work in our new space, we certainly didn’t move any
mountains but I swear the earth moved when the last of the bolts was drawn up
and the rear suspension was there for all to admire in its proper
environment. I’ve missed this work
terribly and fortunately, we are well on our way to many more significant updates.
In
the meantime, I wanted to extend a heartfelt thanks to all of the many
supporters and enthusiasts who have stuck with us through this unusual period
of non-car-related activity and your unwavering support and encouragement is
appreciated more than I could ever express.
You folks are what make this community so incredible!
Sven
Wow, that's some great news for us following the rear link set-up from years back Sven. So glad to see it finally Home for good. Nice heads-up on the spare rims that fit the Cobra brakes. Looking forward to big progress in 2017!!!
ReplyDeleterj
Hey RJ! Good hearing from you! And thanks for the note. Been WAY too long since regular work could continue on the car. Looking forward to a lot more forward progress soon. Stay tuned! BTW, are you back state-side?
DeleteSven! First, I'm very sorry about the loss of your uncle. Such a beautiful '32 but the circumstances of it's acquisition are regrettable. The 4-link is going to be amazing as is the new shop. Congrats on both! Glad to see that you're back at it. I think you should keep those beautiful spares on the car. ;-P
ReplyDeleteThank you sir. Very much appreciated. I was thinking i'd leave the spare on there too! Right diameter, right bolt pattern, $11 a piece and I could probably turn them over with a decent set of pedals! Not a single horsepower required! Going green! LOL!
DeleteSven, you definitely had a full and challenging year on just about every front imaginable. What a precious heirloom in that '32 coupe of your Uncle's. Glad you got the Boss in the shop and are getting back on it again. The 4-link is sweet. So does this mean posts will come more often now??? :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks Dennis! It's certainly been a roller coaster ride this past 18 months or so! Any YES! Posts will be coming more frequently with some videos sprinkled in between to cover some more detailed stuff we're working on. Knocking the rust off as we speak!
Delete