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What did you do to your Mopar today?

I finished throwing out a small mountain of crap from the garage. It's in two piles in the driveway. One for metal and the other wood. While the 2/3rds that houses the car is clean and tidy, and very minimal, the front 1/3rd is a MESS! I have a whole table full of stuff to sort through and put away. But THEN I will be done and have room to operate finally. My damn hands, and finger tips, are so sore. Swollen up and nicked up. I'm going to have to go easy for a few days and let them heal up a bit before diving back in..I tossed out a **** load of stuff! About time too...
 
Painted the new radiator for the '71 Charger.
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So, I finished the garage cleanout and rearranging. Here's the pics. Now the car has ample room all around the sides to work and to paint. The floors around the car are clear. Job done. New windows made the rest look bad...lol.

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I intend to use the same products to clean up my radiator. How did they do?
They worked quite well. I wiped the radiator thoroughly with PRE and was surprised by how dirty it was. Then I scuffed it with a red pad followed by another PRE wipe down. The paint is very thin, but goes on well.
 
They worked quite well. I wiped the radiator thoroughly with PRE and was surprised by how dirty it was. Then I scuffed it with a red pad followed by another PRE wipe down. The paint is very thin, but goes on well.
It's thin so that it doesn't clog the airflow through the fins. Thanks.
 
Cleaned up the shop enough that I got to start both and then move them over one bay. Got my hoist bay back.. and that only means more work! LOL .. but maybe I should dust the cars first.....
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Work is progressing steadily...I welded up the cross panel along the bottom and bolted that in place. Adjusted the tail extensions around some. laid the deck lid on to see where i'm at with lining up for the seal rail. I'll be crawling inside with a light and a marker tomorrow. And a camera. On the + side the lid rear lip sits exactly 1/4" above that ledge across there. Perfect. The fiberglass on the extensions seems like it is going to solve the issues so I will be finishing the left and starting the right soon. I'm staying on this end of the car until it's 100% fixed how I want it to be.

...Oh, and it's freaking snowing...

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I made a pattern from this mess that was behind the sail panels. I decided to use Coroplast instead of cardboard. I put a thin layer of closed cell foam on the back of the pieces I made and did a trial fit. Since the plastic is corrugated, it didn't quite want to conform to the curves as the cardboard had. So, I put a few self tapping screws in to force it where I wanted it.
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I mocked up the old inner close out panels for the trunk inside rear face as well as the mounting requirements for the lock mechanism in relation to the top of the trunk rear face, the seal rail, and the bottom of the trunk lid when closed. This means I had to take into account the tail light shell and how far it sticks out into the trunk space, how that affects the lock position, the bulb socket pigtails, inserting and removing the tail lights in the future, and how I wanted it to all appear when finished. lol. I will be ordering a one piece close out that extends right up to the inside of the quarters on both sides. I will only be cutting out a small square for the trunk lock base to stick out and that will closed in by a box of it's own. When all assembled the two EARS of the trunk lock should be only thing that shows out of the whole thing. I will have the steel supplier make the bends on their brake. Should be pretty! I'll be using Velcro strips to attach the close out panel along the bottom and the top underside of the flat surface.

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Washed it yesterday, drove it tonight.

New rockers are great, I may finally have this motor zeroed in with a mechanical roller and solid lifters on a street car. I think the next upgrade will be EFI once taxes are done, so hopefully Q1 2020.
 
I helped my son and his friend install a 5.9 magnum with transmission (4WD) in his 98 ram 2500HD over the weekend.
The engine was from a rollover and had been sitting for nearly 20 years. It looked like new unbelievably preserved.
I warned him that it likely would have injector problems so we filled the fuel rail with lacquer thinner the night before.
He was anxious to hear it run so he pretty quickly hooked up just enough wiring and installed the starter.
I wanted to make sure it had oil pressure before firing it so we left the injectors unplugged and cranked it several times.
Plugged in the injectors and cranked several more times, nothing.
I said let's make sure there is spark so we grabbed a plug and checked #1, sure enough good spark.
Put a timing light on it, right on.
So I grabbed a spray can cap with a little gas, poured it in and there was some life but hard to tell if it would would run on all 8.
He removed the rail and inspected everything, sure enough the top of the injectors had a layer of varnish.
I instructed him that the fuel rails needed to be thoroughly cleaned or it would likely act up after running it.
He swapped the injectors out of his Dakota which were fairly new and cleaned the rails.
The truck started immediately and seems to run strong but was smoking like crazy.
We ran it for a couple minutes between 1,500 and 2,000 rpm and the smoke seemed to subside a bit, likely from the roll over or perhaps they oiled the cylinders.
Still need to see if the transmission works well, one of the cooler lines twisted off so that should be done today.
Hopefully he can get it ready to plow today, it's supposed to snow up to a foot by tomorrow AM.
Oh and unbelievably the transmission output shaft was different on the new new trans. Everything appears to be identical I think it was out of a 99. Luckily my son kept the yoke from it when he scrapped the truck. Who would have guessed?
 
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Hung the doors and fenders, just need to bounce in the gaps and get'er ready for the money shot..
 
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