Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

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Bullitt74
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Bullitt74 »

DuckRyder wrote:Nice!

I like the Cougar seats.
I really like the Cougar seats too, so I will keep them for at least a year and see how things go. For now, I will drill the extra holes for the original bucket brackets and plug ‘em...that way, as Willy says, I can always change to the Cougar seats down the road... :wink:
Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Lone Ranger »

I like both seats as well but for the safety reason with young kids I think the truck seats are smart(you can always switch the seats when your old and don't need safety :lol: That trim turned out great- it really pops! Beautiful truck :thup:
1972 f100 4x4 4 inch lift with dump box kit-sold
1969 f250 4x4 highboy in progress.
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 22&t=85251
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Bullitt74 »

cdnwillyg wrote:Steve, I'm with you and use the f150 seats, like you said in the end if you don't like em redo them or use something else! :thup: For brackets if the height is right I would just build a plate that matches up with the cab holes and weld studs to it that match the holes in the seat rails..very simple fix and only the height of the plate difference from what you have now. :2cents:
Hey you are a head of me already putting on the bling, nice looking stuff....all new I take it. :wink:
Thanks for the pics, nice to see the truck coming together and way more enjoyable to read too!
Keep it coming!
Willy, you're a genius. :thup: :fr: I hadn't really thought about fabricating an adapter plate, and after reading your post last night, I am now seriously contemplating this option. This makes the most sense, as I won't have to butcher two seats to Frankenstein one together, seems the path of least resistance, and will be safe/solid. I'll need to bust out my welder, get some steel stock and see what I can create.

The adapter plate will require moving the seat base forward a few inches, but there is lots of room to play. The plastic trim pieces on the side of the driver's and passenger seats will hide the seat base completely. I'll check the positioning of the centre jump seat tonight to ensure it will not be too far forward.

The hood trim are the repops from Dennis Carpenter (made in China), as mine were pitted and the black lettering was gone. However, the "Ranger XLT" badging is original with touch-ups from Testors model paint.
Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by cdnwillyg »

I have found the re-pops not quite the same quality as the original. Some of the stuff I have used is close but out just enough to make it difficult to install, and frustrating. Having said that it is still nice to replace pieces that are to far gone to repair with new. I kept my front re-chromed bumper over the re-pop new bumper on just the finish alone.
Your pieces look great, especially your refinished emblem, good job! :thup:
1968 Mercury M250 Camper Special
FE-390,570CFM 4bbl, C6 Automatic, PS, PB front disk.
Stony Plain, Alberta, Canada
:drive:Willy
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Bullitt74
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Bullitt74 »

cdnwillyg wrote:I have found the re-pops not quite the same quality as the original. Some of the stuff I have used is close but out just enough to make it difficult to install, and frustrating. Having said that it is still nice to replace pieces that are to far gone to repair with new. I kept my front re-chromed bumper over the re-pop new bumper on just the finish alone.
Your pieces look great, especially your refinished emblem, good job! :thup:
And that's part of my plan, in providing a review of some of the repop stuff out there. As much as we think we know about these trucks, there is more we can add to the body of knowledge around the bumps. :fr:
Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by popeyes71 »

That would be great to get a review on some of the reproduction parts. I agree that some of the parts do fall short on being quality reproductions. But there are some pieces that I have got for my truck that are good. Keep up the great progress on your tuck!
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by cdnwillyg »

Hey Steve anything happening on your truck? Been a while. :lol:
1968 Mercury M250 Camper Special
FE-390,570CFM 4bbl, C6 Automatic, PS, PB front disk.
Stony Plain, Alberta, Canada
:drive:Willy
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Bullitt74 »

Not much happening this week - visiting my in laws in Yorkton, Sask. Ordering some parts with my free time, and might head to a wrecker in Elfros, Sask for a few parts that I need (you can see some of what he has on Google Street View). Hoping to get back at things this weekend...
Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by cdnwillyg »

Sure don't see those trucks up here like he has there that's for sure, good old Sask. :wink:
1968 Mercury M250 Camper Special
FE-390,570CFM 4bbl, C6 Automatic, PS, PB front disk.
Stony Plain, Alberta, Canada
:drive:Willy
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Bullitt74
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Bullitt74 »

Let’s polish some stainless!!

Image
Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Manny »

That's a great idea on a booth!!!! Love it! :thup:
Just another Ford fool named Dan.
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Bullitt74
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

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Manny wrote:That's a great idea on a booth!!!! Love it! :thup:
Thanks Manny! I rig this up whenever I break out my tile saw, as that sucker makes a huge mess...

Image
Got the back window stainless done...on to the front trim tomorrow...
Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Bullitt74 »

The tire fairy came today :woohoo:

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Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by cdnwillyg »

Looks real nice Steve, :thup: how did your polishing machine work for you?
New shoes too, looks like the truck is getting white lettering or are you running the black-walls out?
Did you go with stock tire size?
How was your trip to the wreckers, find all the parts you needed?
1968 Mercury M250 Camper Special
FE-390,570CFM 4bbl, C6 Automatic, PS, PB front disk.
Stony Plain, Alberta, Canada
:drive:Willy
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Re: Project 'Smokey' - '72 Ranger XLT

Post by Bullitt74 »

Hi all,

So the polishing went okay - I think stainless steel was a good place to start (tough and more forgiving than aluminum trim), and I started with the back window trim as per my previous post. These pieces needed very little polishing, but if you recall from the start of this thread, Smokey was in a fire which must have spread to the rear window gasket as when I removed the gasket over a year ago, it was like a charcoal brick. The stainless just had a brown haze which needed some grey Scotch Brite initially, and it polished out okay with the stand-mounted polisher (see pic above). I did have a bit of trouble with the inside curves, and probably could have used Jamie's (Ranchero's) advice regarding balling electrical tape up the retaining nut on the outside edge of the polishing wheel. Luckily, I have a spare set, so was able to polish up one nice complete set.

The front stainless was actually a bit tougher. In the prairie provinces, we have a lot of gravel roads with takes a toll on the front half of any vehicle. I watched the YouTube videos on repairing stainless, and took out dings with a variety of tools, mainly a flat b*stard file. This worked pretty good, but left pretty heavy scratches that needed +++ 80 grit sandpaper and a lot of elbow grease to smooth out. I then went to 180, 240, 300, 400, 600 grit dry, then 600 wet sand. I found this didn't get all scratches out, so I re-watched some of the YouTube Videos. I found that it is necessary to sand in the one direction at 30 degrees or so, and do the opposite to get the cross hatch pattern. I spent a lot more time working the 180 grit to get the 80 grit scratches out, and so on, probably sanding at least one hour for each piece with dent repairs, and finishing with 1000, then 1500, then 2000 grit wet sanding. After polishing with the grey stainless compound, then white and red rouge respectively, the result was pretty good, but not quite brand new looking. At that point, I decided "good enough" for a truck, as all of the pieces are still quite shiny and brilliant. Three out of the 6 pieces are literally perfect 10/10 show quality (the driver's side piece is NOS...polished up perfect :lol: ). If I would do it all over again, I would use a 120 or 140 grit either between or in place of the 180 grit after the 80 grit, as I don't think the 180 grit is quite enough to get out the 80 grit scratches by hand. Maybe a small dual-action orbital sander would work better at that point.

Some pics:
Image
Colored in the dents with a Sharpie to help determine when to stop filing.

Image
Filing away with my "flat b*stard" (seriously, that is what the packaging calls it :lol: )

Image
The flat b*stard file that I used - perhaps it is too aggressive as it leaves some fairly deep gouges.

Image
Cross hatch pattern.

Image
this small screwdriver that I accidentally rounded off the edges has been quite handy. I used it here to push up some dents that I had trouble getting to, as half of these pieces are 2 layers of stainless folded over. I wasn't able to get between the layers of stainless, but did find that those dents were shallow and could be filed flat without filing through the layer entirely.

I'll get out some pics of the finished front trim once they are installed by the glass company - stay tuned! :wink:

The stand-mounted polisher took some getting used to. Personal protective equipment is a must (coveralls with no loose cuffs, heavy gloves (I used the heavy latex-dipped ones that allowed me to hang on to pieces), safety googles, dust mask, and face shield), and the "booth" that I configured around my garage door tracks and hardware kept the dust limited to that area of the garage. I found it important to keep control of the piece (no more that 6 inches between my hand and the wheel), as the polisher likes to flip the piece up and hit the shaft or the retaining nut. The curvy or small pieces I used a drill and a bob with compounds, which actually worked okay. I didn't bolt it to the polisher stand to the floor, but found that three 18kg boxes of kitty litter worked very well to hold it down, and I put a layer of rubberized matting for lining tool box drawers which kept the vibrations down and protected my nice epoxy garage floor. The polisher is certainly not for the faint of heart, and deserves a lot of respect (perhaps more than most power tools).

My Western Jr. mirrors will be next on my polishing list. I plan to hit the curved pieces with the drill/bob, and straight sections with the polisher. There will be a few dings to take out on the backs of the mirrors, which should be interesting as I can't get the flat b*stard file on the large flat sections...perhaps 40 grit sandpaper, unless anyone else has a smarter idea... :wink:

I will also have to polish my aluminum grille and XLT tailgate trim piece eventually. The stainless has been good practice in working up to those pieces (I think). I plan to practice on a few aluminum pieces that are otherwise scrap. Any comments or advice on my process above, or with polishing aluminum is welcome (either plug it into this thread, or PM me).
Steve F.
Red Deer, Alberta, Canada
'72 Ranger XLT, 4x2, 390-2V, C6, Wind blue & Wimbledon White (‘Smokey’)
8)
2016 F150 Lariat FX4 Supercrew, Ruby Red
Follow my build thread for 'Smokey': http://fordification.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=85070
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