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Thanks!

If it hadn't been for all the powder coating and painting I might have taken this elsewhere. But I doubt they'd be kind to the paint/powder, so needed to do it myself. And if the c-clips fit tomorrow I'll be a happy camper.

Still need to find a repair kit for the Mile Marker hubs as one of the o-rings is damaged. And MM doesn't show one for that hub on their site so I'll need to call them tomorrow. Meanwhile I can lube the wheel bearings and button up all but the lockouts.

After the driveline is installed I need to do the sway bar. And then maybe the brakes and brake lines. Then, I should be ready to install an engine and tranny. :nabble_anim_jump:

Not a whole lot to report today, but bits and pieces.

First, Dorman 81025 U-Joint Retainers kit is, indeed, somewhat universal. Instead of what it appeared in the online picture it has 4 different sizes of retainers: 2 each of two different external clips, and 2 each of two different sizes of c-clips. I bought three kits, so wound up with 6 of the right c-clips, which put me one short of having enough new ones to finish the job, so I put another old one in service.

But, I did get all of the u-joint retainers in. And then I spent a bit cleaning up the grease and touching up the paint on the u-joints. The press and c-clamp hadn't been gentle enough, so there was a bit missing on the tops of each cap. All that is drying now and I'll be poised to put the driveshafts in tomorrow.

And, I called Mile Marker and got the service kit on order for the hubs. One of the o-rings was damaged, so I'll be replacing all of them. And, for reference, the hubs I have are there older style 402's. Anyway, I put the outside part of the hubs on the lathe and used metal polish on them. (I have a bit of cleanup to do when the polish dries. :nabble_smiley_wink:)

Polished_Hubs.thumb.jpg.0684ac2bfeb91dd4c95ac9dbb3dc71e7.jpg

And, while I was at it with the credit card I ordered new gloves and window protective film for the blast cabinet from Grizzly. That's 'cause I'll be doing a bit more blasting in the near future, and the fingers on my left hand are complaining about getting hit with the media. Plus the protective film is getting hard to see through. So I thought I'd get these parts coming in while I put the driveline together.

Then I pulled out the front sway bar and front crossmember, and played with them to find out how they mount, what fasteners they need, etc. Turns out there isn't a good depiction of the F/U150 4wd swaybar with quad shocks in the MPC. So, once I got the way it all goes together figured out I captured the following pics for posterity.

And, as said, I have quite a bit of blasting and powder coating to do in the near future. That would include the sway bar, front cross member, and transmission cross member, plus all the accompanying fasteners. A quick count says that's 48 more parts. Have I ever cautioned anyone about following in my tracks and blasting and painting or powder coating each and every part? :nabble_anim_crazy:

So, what do y'all think about what color to use on the various parts? I'm thinking black for the cross member and all the fasteners, but use the Silver Lining that you see on the already-mounted sway bar brackets under the springs on the sway bar itself just to interject some color.

Thoughts?

Front_Sway_Bar_-_RF_View.thumb.jpg.72f7bd37681f2837c6cdad6ea86998c6.jpg

Front_Sway_Bar_-_Front_View.thumb.jpg.31943312a8e167b3b1e38e8fe5ab1c02.jpg

Front_Sway_Bar_-_RF_View.thumb.jpg.72f7bd37681f2837c6cdad6ea86998c6.jpg

Front_Sway_Bar_-_Rear_View.thumb.jpg.cc362f4e1f33dc8560da4abb881d1c3e.jpg

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Not a whole lot to report today, but bits and pieces.

First, Dorman 81025 U-Joint Retainers kit is, indeed, somewhat universal. Instead of what it appeared in the online picture it has 4 different sizes of retainers: 2 each of two different external clips, and 2 each of two different sizes of c-clips. I bought three kits, so wound up with 6 of the right c-clips, which put me one short of having enough new ones to finish the job, so I put another old one in service.

But, I did get all of the u-joint retainers in. And then I spent a bit cleaning up the grease and touching up the paint on the u-joints. The press and c-clamp hadn't been gentle enough, so there was a bit missing on the tops of each cap. All that is drying now and I'll be poised to put the driveshafts in tomorrow.

And, I called Mile Marker and got the service kit on order for the hubs. One of the o-rings was damaged, so I'll be replacing all of them. And, for reference, the hubs I have are there older style 402's. Anyway, I put the outside part of the hubs on the lathe and used metal polish on them. (I have a bit of cleanup to do when the polish dries. :nabble_smiley_wink:)

And, while I was at it with the credit card I ordered new gloves and window protective film for the blast cabinet from Grizzly. That's 'cause I'll be doing a bit more blasting in the near future, and the fingers on my left hand are complaining about getting hit with the media. Plus the protective film is getting hard to see through. So I thought I'd get these parts coming in while I put the driveline together.

Then I pulled out the front sway bar and front crossmember, and played with them to find out how they mount, what fasteners they need, etc. Turns out there isn't a good depiction of the F/U150 4wd swaybar with quad shocks in the MPC. So, once I got the way it all goes together figured out I captured the following pics for posterity.

And, as said, I have quite a bit of blasting and powder coating to do in the near future. That would include the sway bar, front cross member, and transmission cross member, plus all the accompanying fasteners. A quick count says that's 48 more parts. Have I ever cautioned anyone about following in my tracks and blasting and painting or powder coating each and every part? :nabble_anim_crazy:

So, what do y'all think about what color to use on the various parts? I'm thinking black for the cross member and all the fasteners, but use the Silver Lining that you see on the already-mounted sway bar brackets under the springs on the sway bar itself just to interject some color.

Thoughts?

Nice work Gary, I like your color scheme plan!

So if you had to do this over again would you choose to paint everything instead of powder coat?

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Nice work Gary, I like your color scheme plan!

So if you had to do this over again would you choose to paint everything instead of powder coat?

Thanks, Jonathan. But, let me ask another question before I answer yours. In the pic below you can see that the rear sway bar is black. Should I carry that theme over to the front?

That would make it "symmetrical", but there aren't as many pieces to the front that can be PC'd Silver Lining as there are in the back, so it would mean a lot of black. And, the attaching bracket that is under the spring is silver, so it would be appropriate to make the link black and then the sway bar itself silver.

Thoughts?

DSCN9552.thumb.jpg.76c8da06bbea526f08eb1d7d0c01fd59.jpg

As for painting rather than PC'ing, if you are going down the road of coating everything, which is a questionable approach in and of itself, then you are going to have to media blast everything. And once you've spent that time on each part you want some coating that is very durable. But a rattle can top coat by itself isn't very durable. So you'll need to prime and then top coat.

In comparison, powder is one coat. You prep the part the same as paint, but then spray and bake. So that part is easier. And, in some ways it is faster since from the time you turn the oven on until you can handle the part is less than two hours. But if you were painting you'd still be applying the top coat and then it would have to dry.

Of course there are issues with powder coating some things, like things that can't be heated to 400 degrees, such as springs or parts with seals. Which then brings me back to the question about the sway bar. In reality it is a long spring, and probably shouldn't be heated. So, like the rear sway bar, I probably should paint it. And, I've been using black POR15 for most things like that. And, if I've going to have a painting party with POR I want to paint a lot of parts. So, I'll want to prep the new tie rods and paint them at the same time.

 

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Thanks, Jonathan. But, let me ask another question before I answer yours. In the pic below you can see that the rear sway bar is black. Should I carry that theme over to the front?

That would make it "symmetrical", but there aren't as many pieces to the front that can be PC'd Silver Lining as there are in the back, so it would mean a lot of black. And, the attaching bracket that is under the spring is silver, so it would be appropriate to make the link black and then the sway bar itself silver.

Thoughts?

As for painting rather than PC'ing, if you are going down the road of coating everything, which is a questionable approach in and of itself, then you are going to have to media blast everything. And once you've spent that time on each part you want some coating that is very durable. But a rattle can top coat by itself isn't very durable. So you'll need to prime and then top coat.

In comparison, powder is one coat. You prep the part the same as paint, but then spray and bake. So that part is easier. And, in some ways it is faster since from the time you turn the oven on until you can handle the part is less than two hours. But if you were painting you'd still be applying the top coat and then it would have to dry.

Of course there are issues with powder coating some things, like things that can't be heated to 400 degrees, such as springs or parts with seals. Which then brings me back to the question about the sway bar. In reality it is a long spring, and probably shouldn't be heated. So, like the rear sway bar, I probably should paint it. And, I've been using black POR15 for most things like that. And, if I've going to have a painting party with POR I want to paint a lot of parts. So, I'll want to prep the new tie rods and paint them at the same time.

Short links silver, sway bar black, sway bar cover/mount silver.

All black except the sway bar cover/mount silver, you can always repaint if it doesn't suit you.

I agree with you about the heat on the bar, stuff like that seems to go wacky around extreme heat.

my 2 cents worth, Bill

Did the cluster LEDs, painted the needles yesterday,much brighter, the one @ oil needs to be reversed, LEDs only work one way.

lights.thumb.jpg.218bbc20e282ca3aafe263685858315a.jpg

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Thanks, Jonathan. But, let me ask another question before I answer yours. In the pic below you can see that the rear sway bar is black. Should I carry that theme over to the front?

That would make it "symmetrical", but there aren't as many pieces to the front that can be PC'd Silver Lining as there are in the back, so it would mean a lot of black. And, the attaching bracket that is under the spring is silver, so it would be appropriate to make the link black and then the sway bar itself silver.

Thoughts?

As for painting rather than PC'ing, if you are going down the road of coating everything, which is a questionable approach in and of itself, then you are going to have to media blast everything. And once you've spent that time on each part you want some coating that is very durable. But a rattle can top coat by itself isn't very durable. So you'll need to prime and then top coat.

In comparison, powder is one coat. You prep the part the same as paint, but then spray and bake. So that part is easier. And, in some ways it is faster since from the time you turn the oven on until you can handle the part is less than two hours. But if you were painting you'd still be applying the top coat and then it would have to dry.

Of course there are issues with powder coating some things, like things that can't be heated to 400 degrees, such as springs or parts with seals. Which then brings me back to the question about the sway bar. In reality it is a long spring, and probably shouldn't be heated. So, like the rear sway bar, I probably should paint it. And, I've been using black POR15 for most things like that. And, if I've going to have a painting party with POR I want to paint a lot of parts. So, I'll want to prep the new tie rods and paint them at the same time.

Gary, I hadn’t thought about the rear sway bar... that’s a little tougher... whether to balance the symmetry of matching the bars or matching the visual amount of silver to black. I guess I would probably lean towards both bars being black but it is a tough call. Painting it silver wouldn’t look “wrong” either...

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Thanks, Jonathan. But, let me ask another question before I answer yours. In the pic below you can see that the rear sway bar is black. Should I carry that theme over to the front?

That would make it "symmetrical", but there aren't as many pieces to the front that can be PC'd Silver Lining as there are in the back, so it would mean a lot of black. And, the attaching bracket that is under the spring is silver, so it would be appropriate to make the link black and then the sway bar itself silver.

Thoughts?

As for painting rather than PC'ing, if you are going down the road of coating everything, which is a questionable approach in and of itself, then you are going to have to media blast everything. And once you've spent that time on each part you want some coating that is very durable. But a rattle can top coat by itself isn't very durable. So you'll need to prime and then top coat.

In comparison, powder is one coat. You prep the part the same as paint, but then spray and bake. So that part is easier. And, in some ways it is faster since from the time you turn the oven on until you can handle the part is less than two hours. But if you were painting you'd still be applying the top coat and then it would have to dry.

Of course there are issues with powder coating some things, like things that can't be heated to 400 degrees, such as springs or parts with seals. Which then brings me back to the question about the sway bar. In reality it is a long spring, and probably shouldn't be heated. So, like the rear sway bar, I probably should paint it. And, I've been using black POR15 for most things like that. And, if I've going to have a painting party with POR I want to paint a lot of parts. So, I'll want to prep the new tie rods and paint them at the same time.

I vote for black myself. The call is yours of course. Whatever you do, it will look great. It already looks better than when it was new.

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Gary, I hadn’t thought about the rear sway bar... that’s a little tougher... whether to balance the symmetry of matching the bars or matching the visual amount of silver to black. I guess I would probably lean towards both bars being black but it is a tough call. Painting it silver wouldn’t look “wrong” either...

Guys - Thanks. I think we are in agreement - bar and cross member black and bushing covers and links silver. And I'll paint the bar and tie rods with POR15, all in one go.

Bill - I usually hook up the cluster w/o actually mounting it to see which LED's need to be reversed. And, with a 50/50 chance, there are always some.

And, here's my late-morning report: At least one step back today, but hopefully two steps forward. I've already taken one forward - I got the left-side front axle shafts in and the stub torqued down to the knuckle. But that wasn't w/o issue as it turns out the inside bore of the knuckle is a close fit with the part of the stub that goes into it. And the little bit of powder I'd put on both parts wouldn't allow the stub to go in.

I'll post a pic later of one stub with the powder on and one with it gone so you'll see where 'tis. But I chucked the stub in the lathe and used a file and then sandpaper to remove the powder. And even then it took a bit of "persuasion", as Dad would have said, to get it to go in.

But, when I started to put the right side axle shafts in I discovered that the retainer flange for the differential stub is too big to go through the bore in the knuckle. And the slinger on the outboard end is too big to go through the hole in the swing arm. :nabble_smiley_cry:

So, this break is to contemplate my next step, which I think is to see if the ball joints will pop out so I can remove the right knuckle. That will cause the least damage to paint or powder, I think, but we shall see.

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Guys - Thanks. I think we are in agreement - bar and cross member black and bushing covers and links silver. And I'll paint the bar and tie rods with POR15, all in one go....

I've heard that you always need to top-coat over POR-15, something about it not being UV-resistant. Seems to me that shouldn't be much of an issue on under carriage parts, but as I said, I've heard that you always need to top-coat it (and the advice, whether it's necessary or not, has included under carriage applications).

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Guys - Thanks. I think we are in agreement - bar and cross member black and bushing covers and links silver. And I'll paint the bar and tie rods with POR15, all in one go....

I've heard that you always need to top-coat over POR-15, something about it not being UV-resistant. Seems to me that shouldn't be much of an issue on under carriage parts, but as I said, I've heard that you always need to top-coat it (and the advice, whether it's necessary or not, has included under carriage applications).

Yep, POR15's gloss base coat needs to be top-coated to protect it from UV. I've read that it'll turn white otherwise. And, for the most part I've used POR's Chassis Black top coat. But, I know I missed a few places, like on the springs, as I can see some gloss in some places. But, on the sway bar I'll top-coat it well as it will probably see some UV.

Anyway, I'm at a stopping point for the day. And it was a day of doing the dance where you step forward and then backward, and repeat the process several times.

  • Forward: As previously said, I got the driver's side axle shafts on, but then discovered that the passenger's side wouldn't go through the various passages in the swing arm and steering knuckle, so I took a late-morning break to contemplate things.

  • Backward: The first step backward came when I came back out after the break and realized I hadn't put the brake dust shield under the stub on the driver's side. Remember the conversation about having to take the powder off to get the stub on? Well, it not only didn't want to go on easily, it certainly didn't want to come off.

    Fortunately by whacking the end of the stub up and down w/a dead-blow hammer bunches of time I got just enough clearance to insert plastic trim removal wedges. Whack the stub, hammer in the wedges, whack/hammer, whack/hammer, and pretty soon it started coming off.

  • Forward: I put the dust shield on, then the stub, and torqued the nuts down, again.

  • Backward: Then I took off the passenger's side steering knuckle, albeit not quite that easy. And then discovered that the retaining flange for the differential's output shaft won't go through the swing arm. So I put the steering knuckle back on.

  • Forward: Fortunately I realized that the slip joint in the middle of the right side would come apart, so I put the outside splines in the vise (protected by 2x4's) and gave a yank. Sure enough, it came apart. And, better yet, the output shaft and associated slip yoke went into the diff easily. Further, the outside shafts went back into the slip joint nicely and the seal popped home on the yoke.

But now I'm done for the day. However, I promised you a pic of the stubs with and w/o the powder, so here they are:

Stub_Before_and_After_PC_Removal.thumb.jpg.3c8925432de8e0460c342dc6734ad15b.jpg

And, here are some shots of what it looks like with the axles in:

Left_Axle_and_Stub.thumb.jpg.dbc64ca230569da71e480c23ff9d2143.jpg

Right_Axle_From_Below.thumb.jpg.fdddaba547359fd1002e660e8ced7c08.jpg

Right_Stub_and_Spindle.thumb.jpg.3420c6a5df50000136d11fe668374b2d.jpg

Right_Axle_Detail.thumb.jpg.c0d803cd943449b0d65a0612fb992f7c.jpg

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Yep, POR15's gloss base coat needs to be top-coated to protect it from UV. I've read that it'll turn white otherwise. And, for the most part I've used POR's Chassis Black top coat. But, I know I missed a few places, like on the springs, as I can see some gloss in some places. But, on the sway bar I'll top-coat it well as it will probably see some UV.

Anyway, I'm at a stopping point for the day. And it was a day of doing the dance where you step forward and then backward, and repeat the process several times.

  • Forward: As previously said, I got the driver's side axle shafts on, but then discovered that the passenger's side wouldn't go through the various passages in the swing arm and steering knuckle, so I took a late-morning break to contemplate things.

  • Backward: The first step backward came when I came back out after the break and realized I hadn't put the brake dust shield under the stub on the driver's side. Remember the conversation about having to take the powder off to get the stub on? Well, it not only didn't want to go on easily, it certainly didn't want to come off.

    Fortunately by whacking the end of the stub up and down w/a dead-blow hammer bunches of time I got just enough clearance to insert plastic trim removal wedges. Whack the stub, hammer in the wedges, whack/hammer, whack/hammer, and pretty soon it started coming off.

  • Forward: I put the dust shield on, then the stub, and torqued the nuts down, again.

  • Backward: Then I took off the passenger's side steering knuckle, albeit not quite that easy. And then discovered that the retaining flange for the differential's output shaft won't go through the swing arm. So I put the steering knuckle back on.

  • Forward: Fortunately I realized that the slip joint in the middle of the right side would come apart, so I put the outside splines in the vise (protected by 2x4's) and gave a yank. Sure enough, it came apart. And, better yet, the output shaft and associated slip yoke went into the diff easily. Further, the outside shafts went back into the slip joint nicely and the seal popped home on the yoke.

But now I'm done for the day. However, I promised you a pic of the stubs with and w/o the powder, so here they are:

And, here are some shots of what it looks like with the axles in:

Great job. Beautiful!

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