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whtbaron

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Posts posted by whtbaron

  1. From Jim: "  the stamped date on block indicates that on the 21st of this month  this engine will be 100 yrs old, there is no plate or numbers to indicate serial or whatever, I have had this engine  apart . the carb and   distributor  are not on engine as I took them off, both could be  rebuilt, the dist only needs a set of cap clips and tlc, the carb needs a new bowl  and lots of tlc,  internally the bearings look quite good but one wrist pin needs to be freed up and the   pinch bolt on that same  connecting rod is stripped, all the valves  are there but should be replaced and  the seats need to be redone, the cylinders need to be  machined  but the rings are all free now . piston is 3 3/8" dia and stroke  I take to be 5" "

    From George: "1917-20 was a 24 HP motor. Final year 1921 was a 35 HP motor. Year of motor unknown. Appears to have a 3 3/8 bore and 5 stroke. Please cut and paste the owners info below with the photos . He is 50 miles north of the US border . I will email the name of town in a minute to add to the posting. Put a new posting as Free 1917-21 Briscoe engine. Must pickup in Ontario. "

    " Motor is  located in village of Thessalon. 50 miles from the border.On Google maps the nearest large place would be Sault Sainte Marie  Ont which is a  cross border twin to Sault Sainte Marie Mi and I am about 1hr east of there., "

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  2. On 4/11/2020 at 7:16 PM, WQ59B said:

    I agree that the dash looks like '32 Chevy, but I'm seeing a number of detail differences in the cab to call it a Chevy from '32 (or later). By the time the rear window gains the radiused corners and is inset, so do the doors. This cab has a radius-cornered rear window and 'squared off' doors. The door handle is uncommonly placed below the 2 beltline character lines, and the hinge is above them. This differs from period Chevy cabs.
    Look at the reveal coming off the upper character line, then going up the A-pillar. That's got to be unique.

     

    I'm thinking that "cab" was built from a 32 Chevy 4 door sedan... a 2 door would have longer doors. This places the door handles below the beads, and if the rear of the body was welded to the back of the B pillars, it explains that sharp increase in altitude behind the doors. Top hinge lines up with the bottom of the side window. Rear window looks to be about the same shape. Also looks like he bent the front of the hood to match the grille. I bet if it was clamped down properly it lined up well at one time. 1932 Chevrolet Special 4-Door Sedan | S112 | St. Paul 2012

    I'm having problems finding a good shot of that front bead detail with no 2 toning or pinstripes, but I think it's there as well.  Hard to tell, but I think I can see a weld on the roofline even with the backs of the doors where the back of the body was mated to the front. 

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  3. Thanks guys... I was leaning towards Dodge but wasn't sure. I didn't even notice the horn button. So we're talking 1921 ish?  So far my parts stash includes a Whippet frame and a flathead Dodge 6 so a Dodge cowl should fit right in. I know the landowner and I'm pretty sure we can work a deal. 

  4. Yep.... afraid I'm serious. Not much to go on with this one... front half of a 4 door touring .... I'd guess somewhere between 1912 and 1925. Back doors were suicide mounted since the latches are on the back of the remaining B pillar. Windshield uprights and door latch are a little unusual ( maybe Dodge?). I've been looking for a non-Model T cowl for a speedster project and I'm thinking this just might be it... the more non-descript the better, but I have no clue what it is. Thoughts? No, it will not be going on Ebay... 

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  5. Up until now, you've been hitting specific brand threads... maybe try posting it in the "what is it" section?  Guys around here are pretty good with the ID's... maybe you just haven't shown it to the right person yet. Or maybe it's really that rare... 

  6. Bloo beat me to it.... somebody in the other thread mentioned Moon. I've got a 23 and unless they changed a lot by the mid to late 20's, I have my doubts. Saying that, I haven't got the Moon front axle so I haven't seen that. That's a very stark bare frame. Someone mentioned Stutz having that brake system... you'd kick yourself if you scrapped it and it turned out to be one... 

    • Like 1
  7. Be careful with the thicker silicone based concoctions... not so much with primitive transmissions, but more-so with motors. Chunks of silicone can be squeezed inside and roam around causing problems. I'm surprised the teflon/dope solution didn't work for you. Have you tried cleaning up the threads? Also inspect around the hole closely. If someone has been wrapping too much material in there, if may be causing cracking around the drain hole. Normally for nasty ones I use one coat of dope... a couple wraps of teflon... then apply more dope and "usually" that fixes it. If you can get access to some small taps/dies for NPT maybe try lightly cleaning the threads. With newer automotive oil pan drain plugs, you can also get oversized plugs but I doubt you would get one in that style of plug/thread. Might be worth checking out if the problem persists, but again, be careful because going too big can split a casting or pan. 

  8. Apparently the car has been yard art since 1975 and now has a new owner that is hoping to put it back on the road in some shape or form. Probably not scoring any brownies with the purists, but at least it wasn't crushed. And by the way, the guys you helped out say "Thank-you"... as do I. 

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