Saturday, July 21, 2012
Wheel Options
We have have been considering several wheel options lately. The general look is generally set. There will be a chrome outer ring and spider caps to cover the hub and lug nuts. We have went back and forth on the color for the rest of the wheel. I think we are settling on a candy-apple red. The picture is what it would look like.
Final progress on seats
The front seats are complete. Danny has finished the upholstery on the front two seats and they look great. The brackets for the seats are also complete. These started with a base of angle iron, but that is not what comprised the final brackets. The brackets were revised after dad built the driver's side. The angle iron option was too complex and did not provide the sturdiness. The final option included 2 inch tube iron with milled notches to accommodate the original brackets of the seats. Now on to the rear seat and interior panels.
Saturday, October 22, 2011
More Seat Progress
The progress in the interior is ongoing. Here is the completed driver's seat and work in progress on the passenger's seat.
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The completed driver's seat |
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Pocket on the back of the seat |
The original fabric of the seats are used as the pattern for the new material. The fold-down arm will remain between the two front seats. |
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Interior Fabric
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This is the bottom portion of the seat. |
Friday, August 26, 2011
Interior design
The interior has been mostly decided. Several shades of grey will adorn the interior. The front seats are replaced with bucket seats from a 1992 Ford F-150 extended cab. selecting the seats was somewhat difficult as we needed them to fold forward for rear seat passenger entry. With most passenger cars being four door, few seats will work as many do not fold forward. The F-150 seat fit the requirement. Danny Barger is doing the upholstery work on the car. Here are some of the renderings of what we expect the interior to look like.
Monday, July 11, 2011
History of the car
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August 2011, ready for restoration. See more photos of car on photos page. |
The 1934 Ford sedan has been in our family for just under fifty years. The car was originally purchased in 1963 or 1964 by my Dad and his brother, Ron and Don Abell. They borrowed $200.00 from the National Bank of Greenwood, in their home town, for the purchase. The seller, who lived on East Washington Street in Indianapolis, Indiana, decided to move to California and could not take the car with him. This seller had replaced the original engine with a flathead engine from a 1953 Mercury mated to a late 1930's floor shift transmission.The car had the original spoke wheels on it, but the fenders, radiator, front grill, doors, running boards, hood, rear backsplash, bumpers, seats, and many other items rode to their new location in the back of a pickup truck. As the truck towed the remaining parts attached to the frame, Ron steered the car while sitting on a milk crate.
During the next year (1964 or 1965), Ron and Don bolted the body parts to the frame and installed glass on the '34 Ford. When they completed this, they towed the car to Acton Indiana. Jack Rayburn a local mechanic wired the car and brought it back to life. The car was driven back to Greenwood for paint. Harry Wagner coated the car with Black lacquer paint. This would be the last job completed at his paint shop at the corner of Fry Road and Madison Avenue in Greenwood as this location was to become a Shell Oil gas station. Fourteen inch Chrysler wheels originally put on the car were later replaced with chrome wheels from an early model International Scout. Bill Hendley sewed a black leather roll and tuck interior for the car and installed it in his Phillips 66 station in Franklin Indiana.
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The car as it was mechanically restored by Ron Ennis in 2006. |
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