Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: dart67]
#2854157
12/02/20 08:27 AM
12/02/20 08:27 AM
|
Joined: May 2019
Posts: 6,289 nowhere
Sniper
master
|
master
Joined: May 2019
Posts: 6,289
nowhere
|
If anyone could give me an idea how to get pics off my phone and on this site, i'll start throwin them on here.
Kevin Assuming a Windows machine and an android phone here. Plug a cable into your phone and the other end into your computer, log onto you phone. Usually s popup will open and ask you if you want to download your photos or browse the files. Look for DCIM, that's where the camera phone pictures are hiding. If that doesn't work tell us where you got to.
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: dart67]
#2854205
12/02/20 10:25 AM
12/02/20 10:25 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 16,150 Mesa, Arizona
dart4forte
I Live Here
|
I Live Here
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 16,150
Mesa, Arizona
|
I've bought a 91 dakota and plan on keeping the back half of the frame on the 55 and mating it to the front half of the dakota. I've removed the bed and have the cab almost ready to pull. Am disassembling the front end. Never took into consideration what a job it would be just to get the bolts out.
If anyone could give me an idea how to get pics off my phone and on this site, i'll start throwin them on here.
First thought was to use the 318 out of the dakota. Now I've run up on a 2007 charger r/t. Wrecked. Hemi with 5 speed auto. $1400. No key so can't hear it run. 200k + miles. Pass side destroyed. Decent interior.
Hopeful to get some pics up, Kevin Buddy on FBBO has a 52 PU with a Dakota front stub
“So if it’s on the internet it must be true”
Abe Lincoln
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: Sniper]
#2862821
12/21/20 12:35 AM
12/21/20 12:35 AM
|
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 898 Ky.
dart67
OP
super stock
|
OP
super stock
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 898
Ky.
|
I plugged in phone to laptop. Nothing.
I got to dcim
Last edited by dart67; 12/21/20 12:55 AM.
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: dart67]
#2864226
12/24/20 09:56 AM
12/24/20 09:56 AM
|
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 237 British Columbia, Canada
Old Ray
enthusiast
|
enthusiast
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 237
British Columbia, Canada
|
Looking at plasma cutters thinkin I need one for workin on the frames and firewalls??? Any suggestions? Do I need a plasma cutter for this job? No, they are nice, until you need parts for the imported ones. Mine now sits in the corner broken and I can do most everything with a angle grinder with ZIP cutting wheels, These are the very thin metal cutting discs.
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: Old Ray]
#2864311
12/24/20 01:38 PM
12/24/20 01:38 PM
|
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 19,480 north of coder
moparx
"Butt Crack Bob"
|
"Butt Crack Bob"
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 19,480
north of coder
|
as for cutting discs, i use the dewalt brand only, .055thick with a 7/8" center hole. they last a long time, a lot longer than any others i have used [and i have tried ALMOST all that are out there over the years], and when they can no longer be used in my 4 1/2" grinders, i made an adapter to fit my air grinders that allow the discs to be completely used up. one caution though. i do NOT recommend the dewalt discs with the PLASTIC 5/8x11 female thread that directly threads onto your grinder. they have a tendency to spin within the mounting points with just the SLIGHTEST amount of pinch, whereas the basic dewalt discs just chew on through. just my experience. your mileage will vary.
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: dart67]
#2864682
12/25/20 04:51 PM
12/25/20 04:51 PM
|
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 10,588 Freeport IL USA
poorboy
I Live Here
|
I Live Here
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 10,588
Freeport IL USA
|
I bought a plasma cutter years ago, but I ran a welding shop, so I used mine a lot. The 1st one I bought probably 15-18 years ago was a $900 Century brand and it lasted 10 years before the cutting head plastic got broken. The replacement head and whip (the only way to get a head) was over 1/2 the price I paid for the whole unit. Instead of spending the money on a new head & whip I put the money towards a new $1600 unit. The deal with plasma cutters is that whatever they are rated at means they will cut about 1/2 of that thickness pretty quickly, but as you get nearer the rated thickness, they get real slow. One rated at 1/4" cuts 1/8" very well, if its a single thickness with no air gap, but pretty much sucks cutting 1/4" or even sheet metal if there is double thickness with a gap between the two pieces of metal. I worked in my welding shop for 3-4 years before I bought a plasma cutter.
A Dakota frame is about 1/8" thick, unless you happen to be cutting where there is reinforcing and it could be double, or more thick. If your cutting straight lines, a sawzall with an 18 tooth/ inch blade will do a nice job, probably faster then a cutoff wheel. If you don't try to force the sawzall blade, you can get a nice straight cut with them as well. Measure twice, cut once. I usually cut with a little extra material, the clean up the edges with a grinder when I can. Clean edges both inside and outside on both pieces makes for a much better weld.
Good move on the 2007 Hemi with the joining parts and going with a Hot Wire harness. I think you will be happy with it. Gene
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: poorboy]
#2864757
12/25/20 08:47 PM
12/25/20 08:47 PM
|
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 898 Ky.
dart67
OP
super stock
|
OP
super stock
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 898
Ky.
|
Gene, since buying the hemi I'm seeing problems with wiped cam lobes. Supposedly caused by lack of oil getting to cam area while engine runs at rpm's less than, say, 1700. I did notice when this engine was started it ticked for maybe 4 seconds before going away. Any thoughts?
Also, when you cut the frames, did you cut straight down thru frame, or cut down, over and then down again? Stepped it? Stepping it would make for a tough task to match it up......
Kevin
Last edited by dart67; 12/25/20 09:42 PM.
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: Dabee]
#2864862
12/26/20 12:05 PM
12/26/20 12:05 PM
|
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 237 British Columbia, Canada
Old Ray
enthusiast
|
enthusiast
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 237
British Columbia, Canada
|
You can see what I’m talking about in the pictures I sent you.Russ I am not worthy .... but any chance that the unwashed lowly peasant scum could also see the pictures ?
Last edited by Old Ray; 12/26/20 12:16 PM.
|
|
|
Re: 55 dodge truck using 91 dakota front frame
[Re: Dabee]
#2865120
12/27/20 01:09 AM
12/27/20 01:09 AM
|
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 10,588 Freeport IL USA
poorboy
I Live Here
|
I Live Here
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 10,588
Freeport IL USA
|
I've been a welder for 25 years, I do not step cut a frame I shorten, however, I do weld both the inside and the outside of the frame rail at the joint, and I add a fish plate on the inside of the frame. A fish plate is a diamond shaped piece of metal the same thickness as the frame rail. The Diamond shaped piece is positioned centered over the weld joint, with two points being up and down and the other two points at the center of the frame height. The diamond is fully welded, with the welds all running at about a 45 degree angle. If I have cut a channel shaped frame rail, I will also enclose the back side of the channel, often using the piece I removed, centered at the cut line. This process reduced the chance of creating stress cracks a step cut can create from the corners of the angles.
Step cutting the frame isn't real difficult, it just requires close measurements. You make a vertical cut from the top to about 1/2 the height of the frame, then a horizontal cut of 3" - 4" long, then make the vertical cut from the bottom up to join the horizontal cut. Then you do an identical cut at the distance of the material you are removing. What you need to be careful about is to be sure when you make your intersecting cuts that you don't cut past your lines and create a place for stress cracks to start. Clean up the edges, clamp the material together, and weld the step cut on both sides. Gene
|
|
|
|
|