1937 Ford Sedan
Needed a little touch up.
Took the cluster and all the AC vents for trial fit.
I really like how it looks so far! I'm heading out to Cruisin' The Coast in a few days. I couldn't talk Mark into going with our crew so hopefully he can make some progress while I'm out goofing off LOL
Support for the top side that won't be seen.
Mocked up
Welded out
A great application for a rivnut
Made a world of difference in the stiffness of the fenders and grill. Its mounted to the grill with rubber washers for just a little wiggle room.
Last edited by Kharp; Oct 21, 2025 at 07:49 PM.
The gauge from SPC seemed to repeat as long as you take your time and be very precise. Zero camber
And 1/32 of Toe IN
When my son was racing go karts I used to do front end alignments all the time, but this is my first big car that I've done. And the kart front end specs were pretty wild since it was set up to turn left ALL the time
The concepts are the same, but the kart was so easy doing it on the workbench at waist level LOL. Anyway, got this behind me and hopefully the adjustments are real close. Can't wait to see what Penny drives like!!For reference here is the beginning of the dash construction...
And now...
Here is the painter/woodgrainer LOL
Here is the real frame I bent with some 1/2" steel tubing
I took that console frame and made a fixture so I could finish building the console on the workbench, and the fixture can also be used for paint/bodywork purposes.
I do not have access to a slip roller right now so I had to get creative on the sheet metal curves. I found some pipe with the radius I needed and tack welded it to the pipe so I could bend it.
Here's that piece
Building the frame
When you don't have enough hands

All curves done
Hoping the flat sections go faster
Console has a shifter bezel, cup holder, power window switches, AC controls, and a space in the top is for a radio of some sort to be added later
Making sure it fit the car before I delivered it to Mark Dunbar yesterday for bodywork and a woodgrain look to match the dash. On to the next item after I clean the shop

It was on the top corner, and I knew it would try to move when I welded the piece back in so I made a fixture with some shop scrap. And the front end on these type of cars is already tough enough to get all the gaps looking nice so I didn't want to add to that problem
.
Here's the little jewel.....the hole is for a bolt and washer that needed clearance going to the backside of the grill. Space is one of the biggest challenges with these cars.
Mucho better don't have to worry about that now.
The Best V8 Stories One Small Block at Time
This wasn't my original vision, but I'm really excited about how it turned out.






