Nice job. Beautiful. This truck is what my dad had all my life. It's mine now. Wish i had the time and money to restore it like this. Wish he was here to see it. 💚
I know im asking the wrong place but does someone know a way to log back into an instagram account? I was stupid lost my account password. I love any help you can offer me
@Ezra Forrest i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and Im in the hacking process now. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Absolutely beautiful. The meticulous attention to detail is something not seen often enough, and the difference between GREAT and blah. I bought a new '70 F 100, my first new vehicle. Were that I had it today. I've had many new ones since and more than a few used vehicles, but that ol '70 holds a special place in my memories. Congratulations on a job EXCEEDINGLY well done.
I just got myself a 1969 F100 with a 309 engine and C6 transmission. I cant wait to start restoring the truck like this..and the truck is painted already think it's the original color it came with.
Realmente un gran trabajo y lo más importante es como están involucrados padre e hijos yo restauró autos clásicos e envolucrado a mi hijo creo que es el mejor mensaje, fanáticos de Chevy C10 y de la Ford 67 al 72 saludos desde México.
OMG, I would think this was my old '67 Camper Special if it weren't for the painted grill (instead of aluminum), the painted bezel, and red column. Mine even had the same color spray-bombed paint job. I really wish I could have fixed up my truck like this, but I had 3 kids and needed to haul them around, so it had to go. :(
Let this be a lesson to you all, that sometimes life is about the trip, not the destination. My Dad thought working at IBM and then full time farming on top of that was the way to go. When I left home at 17 I could drive a tractor and that was about it. No time for rebuild projects or learning any skills past the minimum to work on the farm outside of school. I suppose one of the reasons I eventually got into fabrication work was because I wanted to be able to fix all the stuff we didn't when I was a kid. Now Dad is in his mid 70's, and I've moved my business back to my home town for a variety of reasons, and although Dad never realized the utility of a clean shop vs a barn full of junk, once I'm done building a shop at the new place, I too will do a frame off resto on my high school 69 F100 that is still sitting behind the barn at his place. I'm looking forward to it. And if I'd had kids, they'd be part of it. If YOU have kids, get 'em involved so they can actually do something when they get out of high school, and so you can make more memories than.. 'well, we baled a lot of hay and turned a lot of un-maintained farm equipment into junk'.
Ol truck guys are ol truck guys. Get a bunch of old goats driving Ford's, Chey's, Dodge's together and they just have a blast, none of this my trucks better than yours, my daddy can beat up your daddy, nonsense like that. Just an appreciation for old American IRON. A Ford guy myself I LOVE old Chevy's and Dodge's as well. Something about American pickups from that era that ignites passion in some of us. I felt the same about old Jeep's and International Harvester Scouts and pickups. The days before dual circuit brakes, no power steering, no air conditioning may have required more effort, but you were a PART of your truck, not along for the ride.
Just to be clear whoever owns this channel did not build this truck. My Dad and I built this truck over 11 years of hard work. The red is a Chevy color, torch red.