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CUCV Evaluation

iteration zero

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Milwaukee, WI
Hey guys,

I've learned a lot by lurking on the forums and I'm ready to start fixing my M1031 that I just purchased. I have serious concerns though and was wondering if any Milwaukee-near members maybe would like to come over and check it out. The main issue is frame rust. I was underneath the rear of the truck last night installing a license plate bracket on the rear bumper and it was snowing rust. Larger chunks and finer pieces. Did I spend $2500 on a set of awesome axles, 6.2 diesel, a hood, and glass?

Regards,
i0
 

The FLU farm

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Rust can always be fixed. If it's worth the effort is another story.
If nothing else, you could always put your M1031 specific things on a regular 1-ton in good shape.
 

porkysplace

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Rust can always be fixed. If it's worth the effort is another story.
If nothing else, you could always put your M1031 specific things on a regular 1-ton in good shape.
Frame rust is hard to fix , except a new frame . It seems is style GM likes to rust through right in front of the front of the rear spring mount .
 

iteration zero

New member
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Location
Milwaukee, WI
I think these are supermodel pictures...these areas don't look that good to the naked eye. The steel is flaking off like it's old, wet plywood that's delaminating. This is why I would like someone to pop on by and take a look at it with me.
 

glaser06

Member
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Location
Red Stick, La
Personally, I'd get a wire brush/wheel/scraper, etc and a can of Rustoleum Rust Reformer (or if you have the $$$ Eastwood makes a great product as well). Knock all the heavy stuff off and coat is good with the spray then coat with a good spray paint (Rustoleum or similar) or undercoat. Stuff works wonders and unless you're able to poke through in places, I'd run the frame as-is.
 

iteration zero

New member
20
0
1
Location
Milwaukee, WI
Personally, I'd get a wire brush/wheel/scraper, etc and a can of Rustoleum Rust Reformer (or if you have the $$$ Eastwood makes a great product as well). Knock all the heavy stuff off and coat is good with the spray then coat with a good spray paint (Rustoleum or similar) or undercoat. Stuff works wonders and unless you're able to poke through in places, I'd run the frame as-is.
For an Overlander/Rock Crawling/Mudder rig? That was my initial plan for it. I might be able to get away with that as a work truck but would that fix hold up to trail abuse?
 

Recovry4x4

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Look between parts riveted to the frame. Is rust expanding and pushing them off? Is the lip of the frame rusted down to a knife edge? If you see noneof that, you should be fine. M1008 frames pop up. Back halfing a 1031 with a donor frame would not be a seriously complicated project.
 

glaser06

Member
239
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18
Location
Red Stick, La
Yeah, especially for that. It's unlikely to suffer a catastrophic failure, clean it up, do inspections regularly (as you would with any trail rig...i/e every time it goes out) and if it becomes an issue, repair it. If it's not, don't worry about it as that's a lot of work for something that may or may not be a problem. If you do have a failure, it will likely be a small crack that grows slowly at first then picks up speed as it gets bigger so detecting it early is key. A clean frame (even with slight pitting) is much easier to inspect than a dirty, rusty, nasty one where cracks could be hiding underneath the layers of rust.

After you clean it up you'll have a much better idea of the scope of the damage (as will we here on the other end of the screen). If it is a total loss after it's clean, at least you'll be real familiar with the bottom side of your truck (never a bad thing!) :D
 

glaser06

Member
239
1
18
Location
Red Stick, La
Look between parts riveted to the frame. Is rust expanding and pushing them off? Is the lip of the frame rusted down to a knife edge? If you see noneof that, you should be fine. M1008 frames pop up. Back halfing a 1031 with a donor frame would not be a seriously complicated project.
Also really good advice here ^^^
 

The FLU farm

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Too bad you're a ways away. I should sell this practically rust free Suburban. Cheap, too, if I keep the engine, trans, x-fer case and axles.
Was going to make an M1007 of sorts, but it won't happen.DSCN0420[1].jpg
 
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