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Idaho45guy
05-30-2023, 02:20 AM
I took my recently deceased father's truck to town today to clean it up and begin the process of evaluating the pros and cons of keeping it vs. selling it.

Took it to the car wash, and in addition to the moose hit on the driver's side, I noticed that he had backed into something and pushed the rear bumper in on the passenger side. I went to my folk's house for a Memorial Day barbecue and was showing the truck to my step-dad and brother.

314576

I got to thinking, and an idea popped into my brain. I figured I could throw a rope around that bumper and secure the other end to a tree, pop the truck into 4-Lo, and gently bend that bumper back out.

So, my step-dad, a certified redneck who was 2 glasses of whisky deep into Memorial Day festivities, confirmed that my idea was pure genius.

So, I backed it up to a pine tree, secured the rope, and proceeded to gently inch forward until the rear bumper looked mostly normal.

314577

314578

It actually turned out pretty dang good!

314579

I'm in the process of trying to decide which vehicles to keep and fix up, and which ones to sell.

I am leaning towards keeping this 2005 Chevy 2500HD with 135k miles and using it for hauling toys into the woods, and general pickup duties. Around here, even though it is a bit rough, everything works and I could probably get $10k or more for it.

314580

All I would do to it if I kept it would be to add a leveling kit and some more aggressive tires, along with normal maintenance.

Then I need a daily driver and road trip vehicle.

I think the perfect solution is a compact/midsized pickup in 4wd with a topper on it. I would have my dog ride in the bed so the passenger compartment remains dog-hair-free and peaceful while my best friend stays out of the weather.

I would want around 20+mpg, 4wd, reliable, comfortable, and capable enough to explore the woods. It has to be road trip friendly since my grand kids are 300+ miles away and I want a vehicle that won't wear me out going to see them on the weekend.

I currently have a lifted 2019 4Runner that gets 16mpg, a 2007 HHR that gets 28mpg, and a 2016 Toyota Rav4 that gets 27mpg.

The HHR is being sold for whatever I can get for it next week.

The 4Runner is capable, reliable, and cool, but is uncomfortable, gets horrible gas mileage, and is not a great configuration for hauling around an 80 lb Belgian Malinois. I dread taking it on road trips due to it being under-powered and constantly downshifting to maintain the speed limit on the interstate.

My initial thought was the Tacoma, Frontier, Ranger, or Colorado. Been looking at the modern El Camino knock-offs like the Ford Maverick and Hyundai Santa Cruz.

The 2024 Tacoma with a turbo 4cyl just might be perfect.

314581

But, at a price point of around $43k for the TRD Off-Road model, it is a lot of money for a vehicle. Maybe a cool classic Bronco for $10k would be more fun.

Winger Ed.
05-30-2023, 02:45 AM
Good job.

Around here, we use one of those steel cable, hand winch 'come along' things for doing that.
It's slower, but easier to keep from bending it back too far and causing you to back into the tree a few times to get it right.

pworley1
05-30-2023, 06:37 AM
If the moose hit isn't creased much you can pull it out with a fast jerk from an old style toilet plunger.

sukivel
05-30-2023, 07:24 AM
Those early 2000s Chevys are good trucks, mines about to hit 300k miles!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

gunther
05-30-2023, 07:49 AM
A good, Chevy trained mechanic told me that Colorado's are hard to work on. The Tacoma sounds pretty good, but ask around about the gas mileage, and take a ride in one. Your Dad's truck will probably get 15mpg or better on the road.

Finster101
05-30-2023, 08:03 AM
A good, Chevy trained mechanic told me that Colorado's are hard to work on. The Tacoma sounds pretty good, but ask around about the gas mileage, and take a ride in one. Your Dad's truck will probably get 15mpg or better on the road.

I am a retired GM dealership mechanic. The Colorado's are no more difficult to work on than anything else. Your friend just does not like them. They are a solid truck if you are looking for a mid-size truck. Personally, if I am going to have a truck I want a full-size truck. Never cared much for the small ones in any Brand.

That 3/4 ton Chevy would well be worth keeping. It appears in decent shape, you know it's history and you could not come close to the towing capacity it has without spending a lot of money.

Froogal
05-30-2023, 08:14 AM
20+ MPG on a regular basis is kind of a pie in the sky dream. ANY of the trucks you mentioned will probably do about 16 to maybe 18 MPG.

G W Wade
05-30-2023, 08:52 AM
The beauty of Redneck repair is there is no downside. If it works GREAT if it didn't you still have what you started with. GW

contender1
05-30-2023, 09:51 AM
20+ MPG on a regular basis is kind of a pie in the sky dream. ANY of the trucks you mentioned will probably do about 16 to maybe 18 MPG.

I bought a 2021 full size, Chevy Silverado. 5.7 ltr engine. 4x4, 4-door, 6-1/2' bed. I live in the mountains,,, and as long as I drive safe & conservative,, I see 18-20 mpg all the time. If I get on flat roads & use the cruise control,, I get 22-25 mpg depending on the length of the trip & the hills.


I agree with the GM mechanic. I'd look hard at keeping the older truck as long as it's in good condition. Proper, regular maintenance,, and you can easily get over 300,000 out of it. My last 2 Chevies were doing just fine when I sold them and both had over 300,000 on them.

RickinTN
05-30-2023, 09:57 AM
20+ MPG on a regular basis is kind of a pie in the sky dream. ANY of the trucks you mentioned will probably do about 16 to maybe 18 MPG.

Except the old Bronco. It will get about 10 mpg on a good day.
Rick

Froogal
05-30-2023, 10:11 AM
I bought a 2021 full size, Chevy Silverado. 5.7 ltr engine. 4x4, 4-door, 6-1/2' bed. I live in the mountains,,, and as long as I drive safe & conservative,, I see 18-20 mpg all the time. If I get on flat roads & use the cruise control,, I get 22-25 mpg depending on the length of the trip & the hills.


I agree with the GM mechanic. I'd look hard at keeping the older truck as long as it's in good condition. Proper, regular maintenance,, and you can easily get over 300,000 out of it. My last 2 Chevies were doing just fine when I sold them and both had over 300,000 on them.

Our 2012 Silverado with 5.3 engine (5.7 is discontinued) will do 20 to 21 MPG according to the on-board computer. Pencil, paper, and old fashioned math puts it at 16 to 18 MPG.

dkonrai
05-30-2023, 10:40 AM
99 dodge, 5.9 24v. I get 20 to 22 unloaded freeway. 15 to 16 city only.
2wd but buddies 4wd gets about the same mileage. My f250 gets 17 freeway, 15 city and same towing a 7000 lb trailer on the flats.

Sent from my moto g 5G (2022) using Tapatalk

skrapyard628
05-30-2023, 11:42 AM
If youre looking for a topper and arent too concerned with locking it, take a look at Softtopper. I put one on my Ram and love it. I had a hard topper on my last truck and it was a pain in the butt removing it by myself every time I needed to load something in there that was taller than it. The soft one folds down if needed plus it can be removed easily in 5 minutes and its light enough to lifted by one person without effort. Only downside is its cloth and doesnt lock but that isnt an issue for me since my toolbox in the bed is bolted down and locks up.

Finster101
05-30-2023, 11:49 AM
The beauty of Redneck repair is there is no downside. If it works GREAT if it didn't you still have what you started with. GW



Well, sometimes. :2 drunk buddies:

Lloyd Smale
05-30-2023, 12:10 PM
yup those years were among the best for chev and especially being a 3/4 ton its about indestructable. yours is just getting broke in. those are 300k drivetrains. no way would i sell it for 10k. especialy the special feeling of busting through a big mud hole with dad maybe riding shotgun

Lloyd Smale
05-30-2023, 12:17 PM
kind of jealous of the chev guys. i ran chevs all my life and got a new one every two tears. only bad one was a 2010 that wiped the cam and destroyed all the lifters at 20k do to there first cyl deactivation being junk. but all the newer ones got between 20 and 23 mpg. i went with a ram this last time and really like the truck but that hemi loves fuel. about 18mpg stock and with a 2 in lift and 33 duratracs you have to baby it to get 16

MrWolf
05-30-2023, 12:37 PM
kind of jealous of the chev guys. i ran chevs all my life and got a new one every two tears. only bad one was a 2010 that wiped the cam and destroyed all the lifters at 20k do to there first cyl deactivation being junk. but all the newer ones got between 20 and 23 mpg. i went with a ram this last time and really like the truck but that hemi loves fuel. about 18mpg stock and with a 2 in lift and 33 duratracs you have to baby it to get 16

My '97 Dodge Ram 2500 4x4 got 9 mpg. It had a V10 of course:groner:

MaryB
05-30-2023, 01:31 PM
I took my recently deceased father's truck to town today to clean it up and begin the process of evaluating the pros and cons of keeping it vs. selling it.

Took it to the car wash, and in addition to the moose hit on the driver's side, I noticed that he had backed into something and pushed the rear bumper in on the passenger side. I went to my folk's house for a Memorial Day barbecue and was showing the truck to my step-dad and brother.

314576

I got to thinking, and an idea popped into my brain. I figured I could throw a rope around that bumper and secure the other end to a tree, pop the truck into 4-Lo, and gently bend that bumper back out.

So, my step-dad, a certified redneck who was 2 glasses of whisky deep into Memorial Day festivities, confirmed that my idea was pure genius.

So, I backed it up to a pine tree, secured the rope, and proceeded to gently inch forward until the rear bumper looked mostly normal.

314577

314578

It actually turned out pretty dang good!

314579

I'm in the process of trying to decide which vehicles to keep and fix up, and which ones to sell.

I am leaning towards keeping this 2005 Chevy 2500HD with 135k miles and using it for hauling toys into the woods, and general pickup duties. Around here, even though it is a bit rough, everything works and I could probably get $10k or more for it.

314580

All I would do to it if I kept it would be to add a leveling kit and some more aggressive tires, along with normal maintenance.

Then I need a daily driver and road trip vehicle.

I think the perfect solution is a compact/midsized pickup in 4wd with a topper on it. I would have my dog ride in the bed so the passenger compartment remains dog-hair-free and peaceful while my best friend stays out of the weather.

I would want around 20+mpg, 4wd, reliable, comfortable, and capable enough to explore the woods. It has to be road trip friendly since my grand kids are 300+ miles away and I want a vehicle that won't wear me out going to see them on the weekend.

I currently have a lifted 2019 4Runner that gets 16mpg, a 2007 HHR that gets 28mpg, and a 2016 Toyota Rav4 that gets 27mpg.

The HHR is being sold for whatever I can get for it next week.

The 4Runner is capable, reliable, and cool, but is uncomfortable, gets horrible gas mileage, and is not a great configuration for hauling around an 80 lb Belgian Malinois. I dread taking it on road trips due to it being under-powered and constantly downshifting to maintain the speed limit on the interstate.

My initial thought was the Tacoma, Frontier, Ranger, or Colorado. Been looking at the modern El Camino knock-offs like the Ford Maverick and Hyundai Santa Cruz.

The 2024 Tacoma with a turbo 4cyl just might be perfect.

314581

But, at a price point of around $43k for the TRD Off-Road model, it is a lot of money for a vehicle. Maybe a cool classic Bronco for $10k would be more fun.

Maverick is built on the Ford Escape platform, AWD not 4WD... the 2.0L EcoBoost has plenty of power for the highway and hauling. I have a 2017 Escape with it and routinely load 600 pounds of wood pellets in the back in winter. Excellent traction in mud/snow, I take mine to my fishing spots along the river and have to drive a lot of mud. I average 24mpg but I have a lead foot! If you don't mind less power the hybrid gets over 30mpg...

BUT! Good luck finding a Maverick! Been sold out since production was announced. I want to test drive one and make sure the cab is roomy enough for me(I am 5'11"... all of my family is tall). Pet peeve is a seating position that puts my head an inch from the roof. If used car prices stay high I can trade my 2017 in for $7k more than I paid for it and only have to finance about $10k for the Lariat all leather interior version.

Mk42gunner
05-30-2023, 08:10 PM
Mary brings up a good point about cab roominess, especially in the Escape based vehicles. When Ford first brought them out twenty some years ago I went and looked at one. Headroom wasn't bad, at least I don't remember anything now, but my shoulders hit the side window.

I'm not that big, 6' 200ish pounds, but there was no way I would have been comfortable even driving across town let alone on a highway trip. So I bought Jeep Grand Cherokee that was comfortable, until about the 180 mile mark and then the foot well got real small.

Since then I have pretty much stuck with full sized pickups, used ones at that. Mileage isn't that great, but I don't drive long distances anymore either. Plus I'm comfortable.

Robert

Idaho45guy
05-31-2023, 03:50 AM
I checked the mileage today and the big Chevy averaged 11.8 mpg according to the digital tracker. I am certain my dad never reset it in 18 years.

So I reset it before commuting to town and running errands. I'm getting 13.8 mpg average, and that's with AC on, gas that is probably a couple of years old, and he installed undersized tires, so the MPH is 2-3 mph off.

I'm driving it to work and back to try and burn off the old gas. Then I'll do a fluid change and complete service and inspection. Pretty sure I've got a bad U-Joint and worn out rear brakes.

Lloyd Smale
05-31-2023, 10:30 AM
I checked the mileage today and the big Chevy averaged 11.8 mpg according to the digital tracker. I am certain my dad never reset it in 18 years.

So I reset it before commuting to town and running errands. I'm getting 13.8 mpg average, and that's with AC on, gas that is probably a couple of years old, and he installed undersized tires, so the MPH is 2-3 mph off.

I'm driving it to work and back to try and burn off the old gas. Then I'll do a fluid change and complete service and inspection. Pretty sure I've got a bad U-Joint and worn out rear brakes.

look at a new payment of 800 bucks a month and a free truck that even got 10mpg is a bargain all day long

Lloyd Smale
05-31-2023, 10:35 AM
Mary brings up a good point about cab roominess, especially in the Escape based vehicles. When Ford first brought them out twenty some years ago I went and looked at one. Headroom wasn't bad, at least I don't remember anything now, but my shoulders hit the side window.

I'm not that big, 6' 200ish pounds, but there was no way I would have been comfortable even driving across town let alone on a highway trip. So I bought Jeep Grand Cherokee that was comfortable, until about the 180 mile mark and then the foot well got real small.

Since then I have pretty much stuck with full sized pickups, used ones at that. Mileage isn't that great, but I don't drive long distances anymore either. Plus I'm comfortable.

Robert

full sized trucks for me too. if i need to play in the woods ill take my 2 door wrangler and if if gas mileage kept me from going somewhere which it hasnt yet my 392 challenger gets 26mpg with the wife driving it:-P

MT Gianni
05-31-2023, 02:33 PM
Over inflate your tires and you might get 14 mpg. I like the 3/4 and 1 tons for hauling and keep them parked the rest of the time.

imashooter2
05-31-2023, 07:08 PM
You can’t call it redneck body work until you’ve hammered a juice can flat and pop riveted it over a rust hole.

blackthorn
06-01-2023, 11:35 AM
Years ago I worked in a plywood manufacturing plant. We used a 2 part epoxy putty to fill defects in standard sheeting. One of the guys had an old rust bucket car and he used that putty to fill the rust holes in it. Worked well.

MaryB
06-01-2023, 12:26 PM
You can’t call it redneck body work until you’ve hammered a juice can flat and pop riveted it over a rust hole.

Piece of chicken wire, spray foam, then body putty after sanding the foam to shape and sealing it... I drove junkers up until about 15 years ago when my body told me to quit being stupid and working on cars all weekend... the spray foam trick would last 4-5 years before the foam started breaking down.

I never paid more than $1,000 for a car until I was 48! Retired my 79 4wd Ford van that year... to much rust... seats were falling thru the floor... nothing left back in the cargo area, I had plywood cut to fit laying on the floor support bars... and spray foamed around the edges/glued seams. Brakes were gone due to rusted lines, trans was blown up...

Recycled bullet
06-01-2023, 12:40 PM
"I'd get it one piece at a time
And it wouldn't cost me a dime
You'll know it's me when I come through your town
I'm gonna ride around in style
I'm gonna drive everybody wild
'Cause I'll have the only one there is around"

Idaho45guy
06-01-2023, 01:10 PM
Piece of chicken wire, spray foam, then body putty after sanding the foam to shape and sealing it... I drove junkers up until about 15 years ago when my body told me to quit being stupid and working on cars all weekend... the spray foam trick would last 4-5 years before the foam started breaking down.

I never paid more than $1,000 for a car until I was 48! Retired my 79 4wd Ford van that year... to much rust... seats were falling thru the floor... nothing left back in the cargo area, I had plywood cut to fit laying on the floor support bars... and spray foamed around the edges/glued seams. Brakes were gone due to rusted lines, trans was blown up...

Another reason I would never live in the Midwest. It's sad to see the billions of dollars in rust damage that the governments out there have caused to their citizen's vehicles due to using salt on the roads.

We get just as much, or more snow out here, yet we use other methods that don't destroy vehicles.

I just don't get it.

schutzen-jager
06-01-2023, 01:52 PM
bubba repaired deer dented door - removed inner trim panel, inserted deflated football, slowly pumped it up with a hand bike pump, dent popped out w/o any paint damage at all -

imashooter2
06-01-2023, 01:55 PM
Piece of chicken wire, spray foam, then body putty after sanding the foam to shape and sealing it... I drove junkers up until about 15 years ago when my body told me to quit being stupid and working on cars all weekend... the spray foam trick would last 4-5 years before the foam started breaking down.

I never paid more than $1,000 for a car until I was 48! Retired my 79 4wd Ford van that year... to much rust... seats were falling thru the floor... nothing left back in the cargo area, I had plywood cut to fit laying on the floor support bars... and spray foamed around the edges/glued seams. Brakes were gone due to rusted lines, trans was blown up...

Buy spray foam!?!?!? Hell, I had a problem coming off the nickel for the pop rivets. :lol:

It’s a good solution and probably looked better than the juice can. For what it’s worth, a galvanized juice can would last until the hole behind it rusted large enough that the rivets lost steel to grip. ;-)

farmbif
06-01-2023, 02:14 PM
if you doing redneck body work dont forget the can of rust oleum a brush and a paint roller

WRideout
06-03-2023, 08:08 AM
A friend of mine needed to get his old Toyota Corolla inspected so he could drive it to work (we have annual inspections in PA.) It had a rust hole in the fender, so he cut a patch from an old pair of jeans and epoxied it over the hole. I said, "I'm proud of you son."

Last year I finally bought a new Toyota Tacoma pickup, 4WD which I love. I bought a used cap for the bed, which came without the clamps to hold it down. So I made hold down clamps from scrap wood and carriage bolts. My wife is terrified that it will fly off at highway speed. Anyway, a couple of years ago I had spun out my sedan on an icy curve and had to wait for a guy in a pickup with a chain to get me out. I just realized that now I am that guy, so I need to keep a chain in my truck.

Wayne

Idaho45guy
06-03-2023, 03:54 PM
I just realized that now I am that guy, so I need to keep a chain in my truck.

Wayne

These are the greatest things since sliced bread; the kinetic energy rope and soft shackle...

https://i5.walmartimages.com/asr/7030c6af-f923-4496-ab60-6d1b10ebdad6.0e4381920e3f47939d47da71da785754.jpeg ?odnWidth=612&odnHeight=612&odnBg=ffffff

314709

They are like a giant bungee cord and prevent jarring damage to both vehicles, while using stored kinetic energy to free the stuck vehicle. Plus they are lightweight, stronger than chains, and relatively cheap. I paid around $60 for my rope and $20 for the soft shackle.

Streetwalker
06-03-2023, 04:15 PM
Nothing is more disconcerting than to look down and see the pavement whizzing by through rusted-out floorboards and wondering if your ass was about to fall out onto the highway. Yeah, Midwestern memories of road-salted highways!

Winger Ed.
06-03-2023, 04:56 PM
You can’t call it redneck body work until you’ve hammered a juice can flat and pop riveted it over a rust hole.

Sounds like something a city kid would do.
A country redneck uses a well worn scotch brite pad soaked in Bondo & slap it over the offending area.
And to save a buck, ya put previously sanded off Bondo dust and 'cheese grader' filings into the new batch for it to go farther.

Years ago, a buddy was working on a big, classic, Bentley touring car.
He was grinding out a damaged place where the rear of the front fender joins the lower part of the front door post.
He snagged a sctoch brite /Bondo pad and ripped off about 4 pounds of the car.
At a glance- It looked pretty good, but it was actually a rotted out 'Bondo buggy'.

buckwheatpaul
06-03-2023, 05:33 PM
I took my recently deceased father's truck to town today to clean it up and begin the process of evaluating the pros and cons of keeping it vs. selling it.

Took it to the car wash, and in addition to the moose hit on the driver's side, I noticed that he had backed into something and pushed the rear bumper in on the passenger side. I went to my folk's house for a Memorial Day barbecue and was showing the truck to my step-dad and brother.

314576

I got to thinking, and an idea popped into my brain. I figured I could throw a rope around that bumper and secure the other end to a tree, pop the truck into 4-Lo, and gently bend that bumper back out.

So, my step-dad, a certified redneck who was 2 glasses of whisky deep into Memorial Day festivities, confirmed that my idea was pure genius.

So, I backed it up to a pine tree, secured the rope, and proceeded to gently inch forward until the rear bumper looked mostly normal.

314577

314578

It actually turned out pretty dang good!

314579

I'm in the process of trying to decide which vehicles to keep and fix up, and which ones to sell.

I am leaning towards keeping this 2005 Chevy 2500HD with 135k miles and using it for hauling toys into the woods, and general pickup duties. Around here, even though it is a bit rough, everything works and I could probably get $10k or more for it.

314580

All I would do to it if I kept it would be to add a leveling kit and some more aggressive tires, along with normal maintenance.

Then I need a daily driver and road trip vehicle.

I think the perfect solution is a compact/midsized pickup in 4wd with a topper on it. I would have my dog ride in the bed so the passenger compartment remains dog-hair-free and peaceful while my best friend stays out of the weather.

I would want around 20+mpg, 4wd, reliable, comfortable, and capable enough to explore the woods. It has to be road trip friendly since my grand kids are 300+ miles away and I want a vehicle that won't wear me out going to see them on the weekend.

I currently have a lifted 2019 4Runner that gets 16mpg, a 2007 HHR that gets 28mpg, and a 2016 Toyota Rav4 that gets 27mpg.

The HHR is being sold for whatever I can get for it next week.

The 4Runner is capable, reliable, and cool, but is uncomfortable, gets horrible gas mileage, and is not a great configuration for hauling around an 80 lb Belgian Malinois. I dread taking it on road trips due to it being under-powered and constantly downshifting to maintain the speed limit on the interstate.

My initial thought was the Tacoma, Frontier, Ranger, or Colorado. Been looking at the modern El Camino knock-offs like the Ford Maverick and Hyundai Santa Cruz.

The 2024 Tacoma with a turbo 4cyl just might be perfect.

314581

But, at a price point of around $43k for the TRD Off-Road model, it is a lot of money for a vehicle. Maybe a cool classic Bronco for $10k would be more fun.

I love what ya did to the bumper...I did the same thing with my 1995 Ford Bronco and you could never see that there was a problem.....I ordered last year and took possession of a 2023 Ford Ranger XLT crew cab with FX4 system...it is a beast! It is fast enough to scare you and the off road capabilities are wonderful. It tows well and gets between 22 and 23 MPG if I drive it right. I really like it and it cost $43,000.00. If something happened to it I would buy another one....with that said I still have a 2002 Ford F250 crew Lariat, diesel, and 4 wheel drive for heavy hauling....I average 16-18 mpg on that one but when it needs to pull it to is a beast.....good luck on your quest and enjoy the hunt!

Duckiller
06-03-2023, 05:51 PM
Let your best friend ride up front. If people object to dog hair in your truck they don't need to ride with you. My friends prefer to ride in the back seat. If I have to stop in a hurry they hit the back of a seat not the front window.

buckwheatpaul
06-03-2023, 06:18 PM
Let your best friend ride up front. If people object to dog hair in your truck they don't need to ride with you. My friends prefer to ride in the back seat. If I have to stop in a hurry they hit the back of a seat not the front window.

I agree with Duckiller.....our fur family rides with us....it is too easy for them to get injured, hanged, or killed when in the back....

imashooter2
06-03-2023, 06:46 PM
Sounds like something a city kid would do.
A country redneck uses a well worn scotch brite pad soaked in Bondo & slap it over the offending area.
And to save a buck, ya put previously sanded off Bondo dust and 'cheese grader' filings into the new batch for it to go farther.

Years ago, a buddy was working on a big, classic, Bentley touring car.
He was grinding out a damaged place where the rear of the front fender joins the lower part of the front door post.
He snagged a sctoch brite /Bondo pad and ripped off about 4 pounds of the car.
At a glance- It looked pretty good, but it was actually a rotted out 'Bondo buggy'.

Such spendthrifts buying Bondo and spray foam. Must be nice to be wealthy. :kidding:

Winger Ed.
06-03-2023, 07:54 PM
Such spendthrifts buying Bondo and spray foam. Must be nice to be wealthy. :kidding:

Yeah, and it's relative.
This reminds me of hearing about how you can spot the rich people in Arkansas:
They have TWO!! '75 Thunderbirds up on blocks in their front yard.

Mk42gunner
06-03-2023, 08:07 PM
I will admit to straightening Dad's rear step bumper with an eight pound sledgehammer when I was sixteen.

I had backed into a stump in the timber at night, the driver's side was pushed about a foot to the rear since the pivot point was the frame. A few minutes of my buddy and I pounding on it and it was straight-ish.

Robert

imashooter2
06-03-2023, 11:26 PM
Yeah, and it's relative.
This reminds me of hearing about how you can spot the rich people in Arkansas:
They have TWO!! '75 Thunderbirds up on blocks in their front yard.

The 75 T bird is a nice ride! I just need to shake free a little time and I’ll get it running. :drinks::bigsmyl2:

Winger Ed.
06-04-2023, 12:02 AM
The 75 T bird is a nice ride! I just need to shake free a little time and I’ll get it running. :drinks::bigsmyl2:

Oh yeah.
When ya get to it----- if you can sit in the seat, look down, and see the ground,
the official redneck repair for that is throw 3-4 empty pizza boxes on the floor.

imashooter2
06-04-2023, 12:06 AM
LOL Ed! :drinks:

WRideout
06-04-2023, 08:08 AM
How can you tell a high-tech redneck? They have a garage full of monochrome monitors that are just too good to throw away.

Wayne

Thumbcocker
06-04-2023, 08:14 AM
No duct tape?

MaryB
06-04-2023, 12:55 PM
Oh yeah.
When ya get to it----- if you can sit in the seat, look down, and see the ground,
the official redneck repair for that is throw 3-4 empty pizza boxes on the floor.

Old license plates for floor repair, the ridges in them make then stronger LOL

MaryB
06-04-2023, 01:02 PM
I had a Ford Courier rust bucket... the floor on the passenger side had a hole in it. Friends in the know would duck towards me when I hit puddles...newbies would get a face full of water.

I sold it as parts only. Guy who bought it drove it. He hit a field approach and the cab popped off the frame and rolled 10 times. Messed him up pretty bad. He tried to sue me but I showed the judge the ad stating parts car only, not road safe and he tossed the case. Guy ended up moving out of town over that. He was pretty much not trusted and lost his business. He walked into the bar we hung out in on Friday nights and had 10 guys tell him he was not welcome and to turn around and leave. Benefit of being in the car club! group of 200 guys/gals, many of them local business types who passed the word to not trust him... and who would stand up for each other at the bar or track!