After stripping the body off the chassis we then pulled the engine, suspension and axles from the frame. The frame looked ugly on the front end. There was a bunch of Frankenstein like patches around the front end. I sent the frame to be media blasted and when it came back it was worse than I expected. The chassis looked like it had been in a collision and some fool who had never used a welder before had welded patches all over it thinking that they were doing a good job. The rest of the frame was better but not much. The rest of the frame was held together by very poor tack welds. The tack welds were very far spaced and were done very cool so they had poor penetration. An "old guy" came and saw it and taught me a history lesson. He said he remembered watching his older brother trying to weld after he had come back from the war. The women had been welding for the duration of the war and had been doing an amazing job. Any welding on a military vehicle would have been perfect. The women though had gone back to the homes and the trade jobs were given back to men who had no clue what they were doing. Thus the poor welding on the '47 Chrysler.
I was planning on putting in a different engine, axles, suspension etc. but I was hoping to use the original chassis (after boxing it in) but It now looked like it wasn't worth it. In keeping with my concept of a salvaged hotrod I decided to find another chassis to put it on. I came across a few candidates that I could have for little money, a case of beer, or even free.
I love the Reynolds Alberta Museum. If you are a car, motorcycle, airplane or tractor guy you must go. Here are some pics I took a while ago of an old dodge they have there.
This is the car where it was found. That pile of wood right in front of it is the collapsed house it was parked in front of. There is an abandoned town whee it was found. We figured the clear patch right where the car is sitting is the driveway to the house. there is a strip of grass right beside it through the trees where the road used to be. The back end is propped up with boards, logs, and tires. When I first got to it the rear axle was buried all the way into the ground. I used the logs to lift it up.
The car is in very rough shape. I thought this would be a cool car if it was fixed up, but what I was really excited about was the challenge. You can see in this photo that a chunk of metal was cut from the right rear fender at some point. This is going to require me to fabricate a piece to patch in. I plan on building a soft tape pattern from the opposite fender.
As you can see there was a ton of junk in the car. I was excited thinking that the car was full of the parts. Unfortunately it was mostly junk.
Almost all of the trim is missing. The bumpers were both inside the car and I have the grille. I plan on picking up a few trim pieces but I also plan on smoothing out parts of the body where some of the trim was found.
This is the back of the car. You can see the grass clearing beside the car where the road was. I am almost as fascinated with the idea of the abandoned town as I am with rebuilding the car. There are a few more houses there with other streets that have grown over with grass. There are also other vehicles out there too. They are also in very rough shape. There is an Austin truck from the 40's that I was also looking at.
I now have the '47 Chrysler Windsor in the shop. I have the body pulled off the frame and the front clip removed. If things were ideal it would have been nice to cross brace the body from the inside prior to pullin the body off the frame. the entire floor of the chrysler had rotted away and as a result the body was no longer square (it had flexed out at a number of points.) After we pulled the body off the frame we laid it on the floor and went about pulling and stretching it to get it close to where we felt it was straight. This probably was not the best way to do this but it was what we came up with. we then welded bracing all over the inside so as to keep it in that shape while we cut out the floors, rockers, trunk floor and original under floor bracing. We also began fabricating the new rockers and floor pans. I will post the pics as soon as I find the cord for the camera.