Just got another project - '58 Ford Skyliner

Discussion in 'Station Wagon Lounge' started by Breadbox, Feb 10, 2015.

  1. ModelT1

    ModelT1 Still Lost in the 50's

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    Sounds like they used it as an off road vehicle. Odd that is wasn't better taken care of considering what type car it is. I love that body style.
    I'd guess they liked to pull way up in the garage when parking!
     
  2. Stormin' Norman

    Stormin' Norman Well-Known Member

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  3. Breadbox

    Breadbox Active Member

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    Well, after accidentally dropping the master cylinder and breaking it, I decided to work on the top. I unbolted the jack screws for the rear deck and got it to open. They've been hit with PB Blaster and hopefully I can get them to unseize now that I can reach them. Anyway. No bad rust and I have a spare tire, which was quite shocking actually since my father-in-law's garage was littered with tires and wheels that didn't fit anything. The top went through the next two steps of its operation and tried to lift, but one of the rear latches isn't unlatching, so that's the next project. Anyway, it's open.

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    Something anyone who has a '57-'59 wagon should notice is that the Skyliner has a completely different floorpan than the sedans and wagons, with the gas tank in front of the axle and the spare tire under the trunk floor.
     
    Last edited: Mar 2, 2015
  4. Silvertwinkiehobo

    Silvertwinkiehobo "Everything that breaks starts with 'F.'"

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    Fords at that time were notorious rusters because McNamara's Whiz Kids didn't want to spend the money to upgrade to electrostatic paint rigs; it caused a bit of a fight between McNamara and Iacocca (who was in charge of sales, IIRC), and eventually, the board overruled McNamara.
     
  5. Krash Kadillak

    Krash Kadillak Well-Known Member

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    None of the rear sheet metal is common to any other body style, either. The quarter panels are (I think) around 4" longer that say the convertible quarter panels, to accommodate the top mechanism.....

    Regular '58 Ford, overall length - 207"
    Skyliner overall length - 211"
     
  6. Breadbox

    Breadbox Active Member

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    I think it uses the longer Mercury chassis, if I remember correctly.
     
  7. GN300

    GN300 Tipmaster G

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    My shop teacher in 79 was a skyliner fan haven't thought about him for years and ran into him at a flea market ...he was old in 79!.

    said he just spent $75,000 on one last year from California ...guess that kept him young .
     
  8. Breadbox

    Breadbox Active Member

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    At the moment, still trying to pull the 57-year-old balljoints off and trying to get the top to work. Still an ongoing project.
     
  9. Silvertwinkiehobo

    Silvertwinkiehobo "Everything that breaks starts with 'F.'"

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    Use a BFH to smack the knuckle (or control arm if designed that way) several times; the hits deform the hole enough to break the two apart. If it works on a '55 Star Chief, it'll work on your Skyliner.
     
  10. Breadbox

    Breadbox Active Member

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    The balljoint required some mindless destruction and hitting a balljoint separator with a 20 lb. sledge hammer for about 10 minutes and a grinder to cut off the original rivets that held them in place. One side is done, then I needed a break, so... Success!

    http://s549.photobucket.com/user/Breadbox_photos/media/Skyliner/Trunk video_zpsr3ckjj0k.mp4.html

    The roof is still stuck on one side but it works up to that point. The trunk had a seized screwjack and a bad connection at the lift motor circuit breaker.
     
  11. Silvertwinkiehobo

    Silvertwinkiehobo "Everything that breaks starts with 'F.'"

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    I hate using pickle forks, unless it's attached to an air hammer. I'm pretty sure my arthritic left thumb was caused by the hammer hit it took years ago.
     
  12. ModelT1

    ModelT1 Still Lost in the 50's

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    I don't think you are supposed to do that! But according to Newton's law of relatives it usually happens several times in life. After that most shadetree mechanics figure it out or hire some kid.
    Some of those rivets are a pain in the backside also. At least Chrysler got it right on late model stuff. You have to replace 90% of the front end to get new ball joints. :(
     
  13. Breadbox

    Breadbox Active Member

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    The V70 is the same way. They're built into the control arms, so you get new control arm bushings, and usually tie rod ends, too.
     
  14. Silvertwinkiehobo

    Silvertwinkiehobo "Everything that breaks starts with 'F.'"

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    I did the same on a Beemer, which I had each side changed in about 15 minutes. Surprised the Hell outta me.
     
  15. Breadbox

    Breadbox Active Member

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