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Looking good, what's it take, about a week to put together and install? Or you installing yourself?Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Alright Irish, I'm assuming this is the area you meant.
That's what I was thinking. The "shouldered" area probably won't matter much because the stick will go down further after the tube is cut and I'm putting a deep pan on it. BUT, the shouldered area creates a calm fluid area so the fluid leaves a level, accurate mark on the stick. If the top of the tube is cut, forcing the stick to protrude further out the bottom, will this expose enough stick to then be in an open area where fluid is sloshing around, being pumped in and out, not calm, causing an inaccurate mark on the stick, possibly different every single time it is checked.
Why not fabricate and braze a replacement "Y" mounting tab on the original tube to cover the three weld perforations? It's not difficult to do.
Quote from: LTZ C20 on September 13, 2016, 05:05:54 pmThat's what I was thinking. The "shouldered" area probably won't matter much because the stick will go down further after the tube is cut and I'm putting a deep pan on it. BUT, the shouldered area creates a calm fluid area so the fluid leaves a level, accurate mark on the stick. If the top of the tube is cut, forcing the stick to protrude further out the bottom, will this expose enough stick to then be in an open area where fluid is sloshing around, being pumped in and out, not calm, causing an inaccurate mark on the stick, possibly different every single time it is checked.never really thought about that part lol. im not sure how much turbulence the fluid will have but i doubt it will enough to cause a false reading if it does i dont see it being that much off.
Also, I cut my crossmember to make services easier, no ledge in the way of pan bolts anymore.
Quote from: bd on September 13, 2016, 06:05:41 pmWhy not fabricate and braze a replacement "Y" mounting tab on the original tube to cover the three weld perforations? It's not difficult to do.It's for an 89 1500, the shape is wrong for the body shape of the truck, it fit before but rubbed the firewall and air cleaner housing, I think flexing finally just snapped the bracket off. The 350 tube is shaped for a 73-87 firewall.
Quote from: LTZ C20 on September 13, 2016, 03:18:35 pmAlso, I cut my crossmember to make services easier, no ledge in the way of pan bolts anymore.I suggest that you shallow the angle at the ends of the relief that you cut and radius the corners or the crossmember might eventually develop stress cracks radiating outward from the corners. Removing the entire flange as you have will tend to focus stress and flexing through the narrowed section, and especially around the corners.Quote from: LTZ C20 on September 13, 2016, 06:09:36 pmQuote from: bd on September 13, 2016, 06:05:41 pmWhy not fabricate and braze a replacement "Y" mounting tab on the original tube to cover the three weld perforations? It's not difficult to do.It's for an 89 1500, the shape is wrong for the body shape of the truck, it fit before but rubbed the firewall and air cleaner housing, I think flexing finally just snapped the bracket off. The 350 tube is shaped for a 73-87 firewall.Got it. You could always extend the tube to match the '89 design, but to avoid top-hat seal damage the protruding edge of the tube would need to be slightly radiused.