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Thread: Homebuilt body cart.
          
   
   

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  1. #1
    vara4's Avatar
    vara4 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Car Year, Make, Model: 1947 International Pick Up
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    Nicely done.
    Kurt

  2. #2
    Itoldyouso's Avatar
    Itoldyouso is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
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    Car Year, Make, Model: '27 ford/'39 dodge/ '23 t
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    Thanks Kurt, it isn't rocket science but is easy to put together, cheap, and works. Now that I think about it, I think I stole this idea from my Son Dan, but he stole it from someone else so that makes it ok, I guess.

    Don

  3. #3
    IC2
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    I did something similar. The 2x6 "pallet" on top was a late addition to keep the body a lot less flexible for transportation to the upholsterer to work on while I was finishing the chassis. My final cost also ended up being at the $100 mark using some very nice surplus very HD casters from a pottery manufacturer that had gone to....drum roll....China



    I also made up a pair similar castered dollys for the front and rear of the chassis:
    Dave W
    I am now gone from this forum for now - finally have pulled the plug

  4. #4
    stovens's Avatar
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    Cool stuff. I guess we all are working with wood these days! It's a hell of a lot easier than metal! Don(s) weren't you surprised what a 2x4 stud goes for! Man I remember when 100 bucks would make a nice redwood deck or a small shed!
    " "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.

  5. #5
    IC2
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    Quote Originally Posted by stovens View Post
    Man I remember when 100 bucks would make a nice redwood deck or a small shed!
    $100 - the new dollar bill.
    I took my wife out yesterday for a nice, but not fancy, lunch (no booze, iced tea only) and an ice cream cone later at a roadside stand. The lunch was $27 + $5 tip and the cones were $3 each.
    Dave W
    I am now gone from this forum for now - finally have pulled the plug

  6. #6
    Itoldyouso's Avatar
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    Dave, those castered pallets are a great idea. I did something similar under my 46. I took four Harbor Freight wheel dollys (the kind you put one under each tire normally) strapped them together and put a pallet on top. The frame rests on that and so far hasn't fallen off, although I plan to make a better setup soon.

    Steve, yep, lumber isn't priced like it used to be, however $ 36 of the hundred bucks went for the wheels and another chunk went for all new bolts and nuts. One thing I have noticed is that the quality of lumber has improved. I remember having to dig through a pallet of crooked, warped 2 x 4's to find enough semi straight ones to build something. Lately they look much better. Maybe since construction has died they aren't cutting down any tree they can to get wood and the selection is better.

    Don

  7. #7
    IC2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Itoldyouso View Post
    One thing I have noticed is that the quality of lumber has improved. I remember having to dig through a pallet of crooked, warped 2 x 4's to find enough semi straight ones to build something. Lately they look much better. Maybe since construction has died they aren't cutting down any tree they can to get wood and the selection is better.

    Don
    Suspicions confirmed - all the good wood is now going to Florida instead of Japan and China!!

    I picked through a stack of 2x4's in HD a couple weeks ago, gave up and went across the road to Lowes and found some that made it 5 miles home without turning into corkscrews, but it was a close getting them nailed in quick enough.

    Making up dollys or storage devices is fun and wood splinters are a break from the usual steel slivers
    Dave W
    I am now gone from this forum for now - finally have pulled the plug

  8. #8
    Bob Parmenter's Avatar
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    I'd agree that construction slow down could have an effect on the "quality" of wood available, but I'd bet it has more to do with spending a little more time in the kiln to take out more moisture. A slower market leads to buyers being able to be pickier thus motivating suppliers.

    I'm not sure how to corelate what you guys are experiencing today to a couple years ago, but some might remember the crate I built to ship a '40 frame to Hawaii. I had about $100 of material in that (not counting the box of screws and a few sticks of nails). I also used a set of wheel dollies to roll it out to the truck for loading. Handy little devices those.
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    Last edited by Bob Parmenter; 06-01-2010 at 02:14 PM.
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