WhirlingSun
New member
- 28
- 0
- 0
- Location
- Narrowsburg, New York
Hello everybody, I am new here.
I picked up a M-37 from a truck graveyard recently. It was in service as a welding truck at an asphalt plant until about 10 years ago. Pretty fair amount of rust, but nothing that can't be fixed with a little ambition. Frame is solid, Body rust is not horrible. I've seen worse on 10 year old trucks.
The morning after I got the thing to my place we started taking it apart to see what's left of it. We had only hand tools and broke the heads off of just about every second bolt but we got the whole front clip apart. Then we were able to get the bed off and dismantled. The oily sand that the asphalt plant had stored in it preserved the bed very well. The wheel wells were well rotten though. Easy enough to fabricate though. The welders had welded the tailgate hinge onto the side panels and the welds rotted the rear-most vertical box tubing off of the bed sides. I have some ideas how to fix that.
The truck is about 100 miles away from me and I'll be restoring it on the weekends. This was Saturday's session. I unbolted a lot of small parts and brought them home with me to clean up, repaint or repair. Hopefully next week I'll be able to start fabricating some of the patch panels that need to be made up.
The number plate on the dash. January 18, 1952
This is my open air garage featuring mud floors and Lantern lighting. Overhead hydraulic hoist provided by big rusty bulldozer.
Here's a pic of the truck as I received it.
Under the smurf blue paint it was OD green. You can make out the outline of numbers and stars on the hood and doors. Looks like 2411048
After the first day... I can't wait until it isn't blue anymore!
I picked up a M-37 from a truck graveyard recently. It was in service as a welding truck at an asphalt plant until about 10 years ago. Pretty fair amount of rust, but nothing that can't be fixed with a little ambition. Frame is solid, Body rust is not horrible. I've seen worse on 10 year old trucks.
The morning after I got the thing to my place we started taking it apart to see what's left of it. We had only hand tools and broke the heads off of just about every second bolt but we got the whole front clip apart. Then we were able to get the bed off and dismantled. The oily sand that the asphalt plant had stored in it preserved the bed very well. The wheel wells were well rotten though. Easy enough to fabricate though. The welders had welded the tailgate hinge onto the side panels and the welds rotted the rear-most vertical box tubing off of the bed sides. I have some ideas how to fix that.
The truck is about 100 miles away from me and I'll be restoring it on the weekends. This was Saturday's session. I unbolted a lot of small parts and brought them home with me to clean up, repaint or repair. Hopefully next week I'll be able to start fabricating some of the patch panels that need to be made up.
The number plate on the dash. January 18, 1952
This is my open air garage featuring mud floors and Lantern lighting. Overhead hydraulic hoist provided by big rusty bulldozer.
Here's a pic of the truck as I received it.
Under the smurf blue paint it was OD green. You can make out the outline of numbers and stars on the hood and doors. Looks like 2411048
After the first day... I can't wait until it isn't blue anymore!