I could have died!
Moderator: FORDification
- chad67
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 680
- Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:21 am
- Location: Sullivan, MO
I could have died!
I had my "oh my God, I could have died" moment a few months ago. I was on my way to work when my steering started feeling "funny". When I got home I found a mutilated rag joint. The only thing keeping the joint together were the strings wrapped around the rivets. What was your " moment"?
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
- 68 Ford Stepside
- Blue Oval Guru
- Posts: 1152
- Joined: Thu Sep 27, 2012 8:27 am
- Location: South Carolina
Re: I could have died!
You are a very fortunate man. That looks as bad as any I have ever seen. My closest call was in 1995 when I hit a eight point, two hundred pound buck at seventy five miles per hour on my motorcycle. OUCH! I still have the road burn scars to prove it & my left knee looks really funny.The buck didn't fair as well, it broke his back.
"Have A Great Ford Day"
- Ranchero50
- Moderator
- Posts: 5799
- Joined: Wed Nov 08, 2006 7:02 pm
- Location: Maryland, Hagerstown
- Contact:
Re: I could have died!
I found a newborn under the tongue of my car trailer out by the alley a few years ago. Does that count?
Automotive, I watched in slow motion as my '69 4v 351w tipped over and crashed to the floor. Last 3 legged engine stand I ever owned.
Car, '88 stang T-boned a BMW at 67mph. Cop in slow lane hit his lights, I looked at him and never saw the beemer...
Another was spinning out on an icy bridge in my '87 Mustang Lx 5.0 and sliding backwards into an escort that wasn't moving so slow it caused me to spin out.
Automotive, I watched in slow motion as my '69 4v 351w tipped over and crashed to the floor. Last 3 legged engine stand I ever owned.
Car, '88 stang T-boned a BMW at 67mph. Cop in slow lane hit his lights, I looked at him and never saw the beemer...
Another was spinning out on an icy bridge in my '87 Mustang Lx 5.0 and sliding backwards into an escort that wasn't moving so slow it caused me to spin out.
'70 F-350 CS Cummins 6BT 10klb truck 64k mile Bahama Blue
Contact me for CNC Dome Lamp Bezels and Ash Tray pulls.
Contact me for CNC Dome Lamp Bezels and Ash Tray pulls.
- chad67
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 680
- Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:21 am
- Location: Sullivan, MO
Re: I could have died!
My wife fell asleep on I44 with her cruise control set at 73. She woke up as she caught air jumping up on the service road. She made it through a 50 foot gap between a rock cliff and a guard rail and drove through 500 feet of ditch. She blew out a front tire and broke both front sway bar links when she landed. But she was able to stop it on the service road and came out shaken but unhurt. Three days later we got a recall notice for the sway bar links-Ford changed them for free.
1967 F100 SWB
1991 Thunderbird 5.0 with fully ported gt40 heads, cobra intake (also ported) and a trickflow stage 2 cam, manual steering, and custom 3" exhaust
1991 Thunderbird 5.0 with fully ported gt40 heads, cobra intake (also ported) and a trickflow stage 2 cam, manual steering, and custom 3" exhaust
- chad67
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 680
- Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:21 am
- Location: Sullivan, MO
Re: I could have died!
Oh, and I hit a big, dumb mutt with my motorcycle in '94. Got some road rash and my foot got caught on the shifter and turned my ankle into a jello-like substance. The doctor told me I would never walk normally again, but I have no problems at all. I ran 8 miles at last years Relay for Life. The dog didn't survive. Do you still own a bike 68 ford stepside?
1967 F100 SWB
1991 Thunderbird 5.0 with fully ported gt40 heads, cobra intake (also ported) and a trickflow stage 2 cam, manual steering, and custom 3" exhaust
1991 Thunderbird 5.0 with fully ported gt40 heads, cobra intake (also ported) and a trickflow stage 2 cam, manual steering, and custom 3" exhaust
- 68 Ford Stepside
- Blue Oval Guru
- Posts: 1152
- Joined: Thu Sep 27, 2012 8:27 am
- Location: South Carolina
Re: I could have died!
My two wheeler days are long gone. Too many crazies on the road these days & I don't heal as fast as I use to.chad67 wrote:Oh, and I hit a big, dumb mutt with my motorcycle in '94. Got some road rash and my foot got caught on the shifter and turned my ankle into a jello-like substance. The doctor told me I would never walk normally again, but I have no problems at all. I ran 8 miles at last years Relay for Life. The dog didn't survive. Do you still own a bike 68 ford stepside?

"Have A Great Ford Day"
- chad67
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 680
- Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 11:21 am
- Location: Sullivan, MO
Re: I could have died!
Amen to that! I gave it up after my second mishap. Me and my girlfriend (who is now my wife) spend a few hours picking gravel out of my legs after that one. I admire motorcycles as artwork, but they have proven unlucky for me.
1967 F100 SWB
1991 Thunderbird 5.0 with fully ported gt40 heads, cobra intake (also ported) and a trickflow stage 2 cam, manual steering, and custom 3" exhaust
1991 Thunderbird 5.0 with fully ported gt40 heads, cobra intake (also ported) and a trickflow stage 2 cam, manual steering, and custom 3" exhaust
- averagef250
- 100% FORDified!
- Posts: 4387
- Joined: Fri Mar 17, 2006 12:58 am
- Location: Oregon, Beavercreek
Re: I could have died!
Ragjoints should have safety pins built in. If you took the reinforced rubber out you can still steer just fine, but with about 1/8 turn of slop. If that stuff is gone then somebody's butchered it.
1970 F-250 4x4 original Willock swivel frame chassis '93 5.9 Cummins/Getrag/NP205/HP60/D70
-
- Blue Oval Guru
- Posts: 1257
- Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2011 6:45 pm
- Location: Comox Valley B.C. Canada
Re: I could have died!
I had a ragjoint blow apart in a parking lot in a crappy little town a few years back -it had some kinda wierd plastic donut instead of the rubber deal thats usually there and it literally shattered into pieces...of course it was on a sunday so the parts store was closed and i didnt have money for a tow (or even to call a buddy to help out) so i had to drive it 30 miles home -pushing the column down as hard as possible to keep it engaged with the stubs on the coupler---sketchy to say the least..my arms were sore for 2 weeks afterwards
My scariest ever close call :- the pitman arm separating from the steering linkage and me shooting across 3 lanes of traffic and almost head-on-ing a bus (missed by less than 5ft,thank god he had good brakes) - appparantly there is a difference power steering pitman arms (bendix and saginaw)-who knew these things in the years before Fordification existed?
I discovered that the wrong one WILL work for awhile -until the extra force it puts on the nut holding it to the steering linkage busts the cotter pin and then backs the nut off completely....
My scariest ever close call :- the pitman arm separating from the steering linkage and me shooting across 3 lanes of traffic and almost head-on-ing a bus (missed by less than 5ft,thank god he had good brakes) - appparantly there is a difference power steering pitman arms (bendix and saginaw)-who knew these things in the years before Fordification existed?
I discovered that the wrong one WILL work for awhile -until the extra force it puts on the nut holding it to the steering linkage busts the cotter pin and then backs the nut off completely....
- still got my first first car 20+yrs later : 69 f100 sorta kinda pretending its a Mercury M100 w/a 70 f350 sport custom cab (factory buckets) 67 grille with 69 ranger cooneyes 68 merc box and hood,some supercool fiberglass fenders i scored way back when, 76 f150 disc brake frontend..currently running a 90 5.0HO 4bbl/c4 auto & 3.50 posi...originally a 360/c6 f100 Ranger with dealer added towpack (incl. kelsey hays trailer brake),boxside toolbox,behind the seat stowage & belly tank...only original parts left on 'er are the frame,rear end,rear springs,and rear bumper...