A new member in the family...

No tech discussion, please

Moderator: FORDification

Post Reply
onetuford
Preferred User
Preferred User
Posts: 384
Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2010 8:15 pm
Location: Central Wisconsin

A new member in the family...

Post by onetuford »

HaHa not another child, but another bump! This is my new to me 1972 Ford F250 (F252) Ranger XLT C/S in seapine green metallic. It's got a 390 V-8 and a New Process 4 speed, and a 3.54 Dana limited slip. I assume that is all true since the son of the original owner who bought it new in 1971 from Medford Ford sold it to me. It needs some work, but so do I! Oh yeah, my 4 year old son named this one "Yoda"

Image

Image
"I'm not saying, I'm just saying"

1972 Ford F250 C/S XLT 390 NP435, purchased from the son of the original owner, now named Yoda
1967 Ford f100, currently. (2nd Titled owner) Now named Captian Hook
fordman
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 22329
Joined: Sun Aug 28, 2005 8:17 pm
Location: Kansas, Ottawa
Contact:

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by fordman »

you cant mod the tail gate to remove the "to " from it. toyota
onetuford
Preferred User
Preferred User
Posts: 384
Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2010 8:15 pm
Location: Central Wisconsin

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by onetuford »

fordman wrote:you cant mod the tail gate to remove the "to " from it. toyota
:lol:

Thank God for that!!
"I'm not saying, I'm just saying"

1972 Ford F250 C/S XLT 390 NP435, purchased from the son of the original owner, now named Yoda
1967 Ford f100, currently. (2nd Titled owner) Now named Captian Hook
MrMajestyk
Blue Oval Fan
Blue Oval Fan
Posts: 508
Joined: Sun Apr 17, 2011 11:55 pm
Location: Phoenix, Arizona.

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by MrMajestyk »

Excellent Find :thup:
User avatar
robroy
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 3768
Joined: Sun Jul 06, 2008 4:36 pm
Location: California, Salinas

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by robroy »

Good day OneTuFord,

Superb addition. Especially nice with the 390 and the differential!!! I'll be curious to hear your thoughts on how it cruises on the highway with those gears.

Robroy
User avatar
3 Speed
New Member
New Member
Posts: 230
Joined: Sun Aug 30, 2009 12:59 pm
Location: Georgia

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by 3 Speed »

Congrats! No cigars?

Just the dash pad is worth something.

What emblem is that on the side of the cowl?

Wish I had those side bodies on mine!
67 F101 Custom Cab longbed, 352 V8, 3 speed manual
User avatar
Ranchero50
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 5799
Joined: Wed Nov 08, 2006 7:02 pm
Location: Maryland, Hagerstown
Contact:

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by Ranchero50 »

Good looking truck for the rust belt. Is that a dealer key fob by chance?

Jamie
'70 F-350 CS Cummins 6BT 10klb truck 64k mile Bahama Blue

Contact me for CNC Dome Lamp Bezels and Ash Tray pulls.
User avatar
Calfdemon
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 2672
Joined: Tue May 25, 2010 11:31 pm
Location: California, Santa Clarita

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by Calfdemon »

3 Speed wrote:
What emblem is that on the side of the cowl?
That is the Camper Special emblem.
-Rich

Current toys -
69 Ford F350 Crew Cab - 460 / C6 - http://i253.photobucket.com/albums/hh67 ... lqgskp.jpg
31 Ford Vicky - 1955 270 Red Ram Hemi / 4 speed - http://i253.photobucket.com/albums/hh67 ... bsibvn.jpg

Former toys -
67 Pontiac Firebird 400 convertible (sold 9/13) - http://i253.photobucket.com/albums/hh67 ... bird-1.jpg
67 Ford Fairlane GT - 390 / 4 speed (sold 7/15) - http://i253.photobucket.com/albums/hh67 ... c5hu8z.jpg
onetuford
Preferred User
Preferred User
Posts: 384
Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2010 8:15 pm
Location: Central Wisconsin

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by onetuford »

robroy wrote:Good day OneTuFord,

Superb addition. Especially nice with the 390 and the differential!!! I'll be curious to hear your thoughts on how it cruises on the highway with those gears.

Robroy
It drove home real nice at double nickels, but the old school bias plies left a little something to be desired. :D I probably woudn't chose anything lower than 3.50 with out O.D. myself, and as luck would have it both my trucks are 3.50 and 3.54 (67 and 72).
Ranchero50 wrote:Good looking truck for the rust belt. Is that a dealer key fob by chance?

Jamie
Some old school small engine dealer, but I do have a bunch of metal tags that came from the when the truck was new, one painted the original color, and another aluminum one. Lots of it is in better shape than my '67 from OK. The truck was built in Canada, and was repainted in like 1986 when the original owner took off for Alaska. It runs real good, but has a nasty exaust leak on the right side, but came with a new gasket. Of course I'm having a heck of time with those stupid top bolts on the manifold.
3 Speed wrote:Congrats! No cigars?

Just the dash pad is worth something.

What emblem is that on the side of the cowl?

Wish I had those side bodies on mine!
The dash pad and the diff are probably worth what I paid for it, but I'm gonna drive the crud out of it. It is indeed the C/S emblem. I've also got the Ranger and the XLT for it, and the fat trim for the box, and the tailgate peice.
"I'm not saying, I'm just saying"

1972 Ford F250 C/S XLT 390 NP435, purchased from the son of the original owner, now named Yoda
1967 Ford f100, currently. (2nd Titled owner) Now named Captian Hook
mrollings53
Blue Oval Fan
Blue Oval Fan
Posts: 617
Joined: Mon May 10, 2010 6:09 pm
Location: Tacoma, WA

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by mrollings53 »

Those rear tires kinda look like the ones that came on my truck. I'd suggest changing your rubber. It may have handled fine up until now, but put a load on it or try to go faster than sixty and your in for a rough ride. Once I replaced the 20 year old tires on my truck the ride was as smooth as glass.

What's the deal with sticking tires like yours on the rear and normal tires on the front anyway?
Common Sense is an Uncommon Virtue
User avatar
flyboy2610
100% FORDified!
100% FORDified!
Posts: 4901
Joined: Sun Oct 03, 2004 6:42 pm
Location: Nebraska, Lincoln

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by flyboy2610 »

mrollings53 wrote: What's the deal with sticking tires like yours on the rear and normal tires on the front anyway?
You mean the tread pattern? Probably to help get a camper out of some of the more remote camping spots. My '69 CS has aggressive tread on the rear tires, and normal tread up front, so I'm guessing that's why.
"If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy."
Red Green

If you're going to live like there's no hell...............
you'd better be right.
http://theworldasiseeit-flyboy2610.blog ... ee-it.html
onetuford
Preferred User
Preferred User
Posts: 384
Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2010 8:15 pm
Location: Central Wisconsin

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by onetuford »

mrollings53 wrote:What's the deal with sticking tires like yours on the rear and normal tires on the front anyway?
Havn't you ever driven in snow? This is at least the 10 millionth truck i've seen like this up here in 'Sconnie, in fact my dad's old beat up rusty C/S wore the same rubber pattern. I wouldn't call the fronts normal, they are old bias ply pieces as well. I will change them out soon as I get my hands on some 16 rims for the right price...FREE!!
"I'm not saying, I'm just saying"

1972 Ford F250 C/S XLT 390 NP435, purchased from the son of the original owner, now named Yoda
1967 Ford f100, currently. (2nd Titled owner) Now named Captian Hook
User avatar
3 Speed
New Member
New Member
Posts: 230
Joined: Sun Aug 30, 2009 12:59 pm
Location: Georgia

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by 3 Speed »

Growing up in the country we called those rear tires "mud treads." Nobody had 4WD but farmers had to get around in the mud and weather. My granddad and uncles always had them, and I imagine they helped on the dirt roads.
67 F101 Custom Cab longbed, 352 V8, 3 speed manual
UNCLE BOO
New Member
New Member
Posts: 93
Joined: Tue Mar 22, 2011 2:34 pm
Location: Calgary, Alberta. Canada

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by UNCLE BOO »

onetuford wrote:
mrollings53 wrote:What's the deal with sticking tires like yours on the rear and normal tires on the front anyway?
Havn't you ever driven in snow? This is at least the 10 millionth truck i've seen like this up here in 'Sconnie, in fact my dad's old beat up rusty C/S wore the same rubber pattern. I wouldn't call the fronts normal, they are old bias ply pieces as well. I will change them out soon as I get my hands on some 16 rims for the right price...FREE!!
Great score, onetuford!

I have a '72 F250 Ranger XLT myself, and the first thing I did was replace the old rubber. The tires were not really in that bad shape....they were just 20 years old! i didn't trust 'em. The ride with new rubber is great, and the handling seems better as well.

Regarding your comment about a bad exhaust gasket leak on your 390, mine had the same. It seems those old 390's had a problem with that! When the exhaust manifold was pulled off, there was a nasty groove worn into both the head and the manifold from the hot gasses shootinging out at that gasket leak. I got lucky and had the manifold planed down to remove the groove on it. I didn't want to take the head off (motor has never been touched) to have it planed as well. So my brother (the mechanic) used some liquid metal gasket stuff on the head groove, slapped a new gasket and the manifold back on, and bolted it up tight for a few days before starting her up again. it worked perfectly....no more leak.

I'd forgotten how much fun it is bouncing along on the highway, on that big old bench seat and that stiff 250 suspension! :hd:

Have fun with yours!
1953 F100
1972 F250 Ranger XLT/390/Longbox
1968 F100 Ranger longbox (project)
1966 Mustang Coupe / 289-4bbl
1975 Mercury Cougar XR7 / 351M w/351 cleveland "Aussie" heads / 4bbl
User avatar
TexasTruck72
Preferred User
Preferred User
Posts: 316
Joined: Fri Jun 26, 2009 12:04 pm
Location: Green Level, North Carolina

Re: A new member in the family...

Post by TexasTruck72 »

3 Speed wrote:Growing up in the country we called those rear tires "mud treads." Nobody had 4WD but farmers had to get around in the mud and weather. My granddad and uncles always had them, and I imagine they helped on the dirt roads.
:yt:
So true! People today think you have to have 4wd. That used to not be the case and you really don't need it if you have a set of aggresive tread tires on the rear. I see a lot of old trucks that still have 30-40 yr old tires on them with this type of set up: road on front and heavy lugs on rear.
Jack

1943 Ford GPW Jeep(sold)
1972 F-100 Custom
1976 F-150 Explorer
1996 F-150 Eddie Bauer ed.
Post Reply