MaxWedgeWagon
Active Member
Copied from my welcome wagon post---
Proud new Mopar owner from Colorado. I run John's 4x4 in Boulder and have been a Mopar fan for years but never owned one other than sweptline pickups. I have had a 440 in my garage for 6 years waiting for the right B Body!
Picked up a mostly together 1970 Coronet Wagon. Bought it sight unseen and had it shipped from South Dakota. Been looking nationwide for a 68-70 Wagon for a few years now, constantly on Craigslist or Facebook (my wife is happy I finally found one). While I would love a Roadrunner or Superbee, my family and English Mastiff I haul around swayed me to the rare wagons.
Few pictures show after I stripped the carpet out and cleaned her up to get a game plan. The entire underside of the car is super stout. However the quarters, tailgate and a few other small spots on the exterior body need alot of attention. If anyone has a lead on a 70 front valance, I would be very interested as mine has been put in a ditch by the looks of it.
Looking to do a 440 stroked to 500 With Max Wedge Heads to make a fun daily driver and kid hauler.
Time to get after it!
--- Update
I apologize for my writing or ranting, theres a reason I went into the auto industry...
I Found a 440/727 to slap in this thing while I build my stroker. Believe it or not I found it in a 5 series BMW built for a roadkill drag event - funny because I sold my M3 last year... Its an RV Motor with 906 heads and decent cam and terrible compression ratio. I did a quick refresh and slapped some thin cometic gaskets on it to help this pooch as much as we could.
I apologize in advance but I am putting a sporty set of bucket seats in the front out of an e36 m3. They are full manual, extremely adjustable, accept a harness, and look kinda close to b body buckets minus all the bolsters of course. They are called Vader seats and in my opinion are some of the best seats out there. To complete the look I picked up a modern hellcat center console for $100 shipped to my door. I think this will be pretty nice for a driver and it has cup holders something all of my cars are lacking.
I decided to get after the body work before I throw all my money at this thing. Because its a wagon I decided to try Super bee quarters and make it work... Boy was I wrong. wagons are different. About 4-5" longer and the rear of the quarter hangs lower as well.
Keep in mind other than small patch jobs this is my first real attempt at metal work and given this is a driver and not a show winner, Im not shooting for perfection. But I am hoping for Zero Rot and doing things the right way or at least the right thing the wrong way.
I started by cutting out all the rot on the rear bumper support and inner supports, tailgate support, all that crap needs to be rebuilt. I found some scraps that would do the job and did some fitting. I decided to wait to weld everything up until the quarter was mocked up
I hung the quarter by eye ball over the existing sheetmetal or lack of it. I quickly realized my Bee quarters wont fit for ****, and started to hack them up, letting the body lines determine my cuts. I also cut the rear most section off as I prepared to lengthen them. Once chopped up I used Clecos to hold it in place and did a rough form of the door jamb. The new quarter is now looking more frankenstein than anything. I then mounted the rear piece using the bumper as a guide and cleco'd it in place. My second ohh **** moment is realizing my bumper hangs down 2-3" past the bottom of the quarter... I will be addressing this later. Once everything was lined up to the best of my ability, I traced the gap on a section of replacement quarter left overs and tack welded it together... Now it's long enough it just looks terrible. Spent a good while on the floor with some hammer and dollies and hammered the body line in the new section and did my best to make it look decent.
Hung the quarter again and marked out my cut lines. Made my cuts and quickly realized just how much of the door jamb I will be rebuilding. Grabbed some flat bar and bent it around a 55 gallon drum which matched the wheel well perfectly. Slid the bent flat bar between the door jamb skin and wheel house. Cleaned the metal, spray with some weld through primer, Mig weld it up. Finalized all my rear brackets and supports now that its matched to the new quarter. Prepped the car and back side of the quarters with weld through primer and rust encapsulator paint and bedliner.
Tack welded the quarter to the car and prepared to do some shaping. The new quarter also looks like **** by the door as the new quarter sticks out past the door. So I broke out the cutting tools and hacked and hammered the body lines to the best of my ability. Then proceeded to fully weld this thing onto the car. I used Mig where difficult and Tigged the surface or main cuts on the body.
Overall Im not mad about it. Considering my skill level and the time it actually took to get to this point, The outcome is not terrible. With some more dolly time and lead filler, this things gonna look fine.
Hopefully I can get the body worked wrapped up and undercoat the car with Chassis Saver black paint within the next 2 weeks. Smooth sailing from there!
Proud new Mopar owner from Colorado. I run John's 4x4 in Boulder and have been a Mopar fan for years but never owned one other than sweptline pickups. I have had a 440 in my garage for 6 years waiting for the right B Body!
Picked up a mostly together 1970 Coronet Wagon. Bought it sight unseen and had it shipped from South Dakota. Been looking nationwide for a 68-70 Wagon for a few years now, constantly on Craigslist or Facebook (my wife is happy I finally found one). While I would love a Roadrunner or Superbee, my family and English Mastiff I haul around swayed me to the rare wagons.
Few pictures show after I stripped the carpet out and cleaned her up to get a game plan. The entire underside of the car is super stout. However the quarters, tailgate and a few other small spots on the exterior body need alot of attention. If anyone has a lead on a 70 front valance, I would be very interested as mine has been put in a ditch by the looks of it.
Looking to do a 440 stroked to 500 With Max Wedge Heads to make a fun daily driver and kid hauler.
Time to get after it!
--- Update
I apologize for my writing or ranting, theres a reason I went into the auto industry...
I Found a 440/727 to slap in this thing while I build my stroker. Believe it or not I found it in a 5 series BMW built for a roadkill drag event - funny because I sold my M3 last year... Its an RV Motor with 906 heads and decent cam and terrible compression ratio. I did a quick refresh and slapped some thin cometic gaskets on it to help this pooch as much as we could.
I apologize in advance but I am putting a sporty set of bucket seats in the front out of an e36 m3. They are full manual, extremely adjustable, accept a harness, and look kinda close to b body buckets minus all the bolsters of course. They are called Vader seats and in my opinion are some of the best seats out there. To complete the look I picked up a modern hellcat center console for $100 shipped to my door. I think this will be pretty nice for a driver and it has cup holders something all of my cars are lacking.
I decided to get after the body work before I throw all my money at this thing. Because its a wagon I decided to try Super bee quarters and make it work... Boy was I wrong. wagons are different. About 4-5" longer and the rear of the quarter hangs lower as well.
Keep in mind other than small patch jobs this is my first real attempt at metal work and given this is a driver and not a show winner, Im not shooting for perfection. But I am hoping for Zero Rot and doing things the right way or at least the right thing the wrong way.
I started by cutting out all the rot on the rear bumper support and inner supports, tailgate support, all that crap needs to be rebuilt. I found some scraps that would do the job and did some fitting. I decided to wait to weld everything up until the quarter was mocked up
I hung the quarter by eye ball over the existing sheetmetal or lack of it. I quickly realized my Bee quarters wont fit for ****, and started to hack them up, letting the body lines determine my cuts. I also cut the rear most section off as I prepared to lengthen them. Once chopped up I used Clecos to hold it in place and did a rough form of the door jamb. The new quarter is now looking more frankenstein than anything. I then mounted the rear piece using the bumper as a guide and cleco'd it in place. My second ohh **** moment is realizing my bumper hangs down 2-3" past the bottom of the quarter... I will be addressing this later. Once everything was lined up to the best of my ability, I traced the gap on a section of replacement quarter left overs and tack welded it together... Now it's long enough it just looks terrible. Spent a good while on the floor with some hammer and dollies and hammered the body line in the new section and did my best to make it look decent.
Hung the quarter again and marked out my cut lines. Made my cuts and quickly realized just how much of the door jamb I will be rebuilding. Grabbed some flat bar and bent it around a 55 gallon drum which matched the wheel well perfectly. Slid the bent flat bar between the door jamb skin and wheel house. Cleaned the metal, spray with some weld through primer, Mig weld it up. Finalized all my rear brackets and supports now that its matched to the new quarter. Prepped the car and back side of the quarters with weld through primer and rust encapsulator paint and bedliner.
Tack welded the quarter to the car and prepared to do some shaping. The new quarter also looks like **** by the door as the new quarter sticks out past the door. So I broke out the cutting tools and hacked and hammered the body lines to the best of my ability. Then proceeded to fully weld this thing onto the car. I used Mig where difficult and Tigged the surface or main cuts on the body.
Overall Im not mad about it. Considering my skill level and the time it actually took to get to this point, The outcome is not terrible. With some more dolly time and lead filler, this things gonna look fine.
Hopefully I can get the body worked wrapped up and undercoat the car with Chassis Saver black paint within the next 2 weeks. Smooth sailing from there!