74 Scout II -

TKneese42

New member
Well it's time to start a thread for the 1974 Scout II rebuild. Bought it at a swap meet in my hometown. It has an amc 258 l6, which is perectly adequate, since this Scout belongs to my 16-year-old daughter who is a natural-born adrenaline junkie. Michael mayben rebuilt the carburetor (I'm so glad I met him!!). After we drove it once, I started taking it apart & that's the direction it's gone since. Until I started this project, most of my mechanical experience has been limited to lawn mowers & tractors, so please be patient with me here. Also most of my best photos went on a one-way trip to mexico with my pick-up & my lap-top in February '2012, so I'm a little limited in the show-and-tell department.
tkneese42-albums-74-Scout-II-original-pics-picture980-74scout-original-exterior.jpg

Here's the interior on day 1:
tkneese42-albums-74-Scout-II-original-pics-picture981-74scout-origianalinterior.jpg

Here's my daughter's idea of what her Scout should look like when it's finished:
tkneese42-albums-final-pics-picture982-avatar-drkblue.jpg
 
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Re: 74 Scout II - Body-off Rebuild

I went looking in the local salvage yard for a replacement bed & figured out that the raised ribs of a 1980's-looking Ford bed had the same o.c. Dimensions as a Scout II bed. It cost $35. Here it is, up-side down gettin the gas tank bracket welded on:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture983-74scout-bed1.jpg

This is a new back corner that I fabricated:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture988-74scout-bed9.jpg

Tacking the Ford bed in place:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture985-74scout-bed3.jpg

Bondo for the open ends in the front:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture986-74scout-bed6.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture987-74scout-bed5.jpg

Before bed liner:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1010-74scout-bed10.jpg
 
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Replacing the front floor & bad spots on the rocker panels:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1003-74scout-cabfloor.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1004-74scout-cabfloor3.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1005-74scout-cabfloor4.jpg

Rebuilding the front corner braces:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1000-74scout-cabdoorcorners2.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture998-74scout-cabdoorcorners3.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture999-74scout-cabdoorcorners4.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1007-74scout-cabdoorcorners5.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1008-74scout-cabdoorcorners6.jpg
 
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Chico, I've had a lot of opportunity to hone my welding skills. There was the usual rust on the floors, bed, rocker panels, etc. You can't see it in these pics, but the rear-right quarter panel & end-cap were wrecked & had to be replaced. I'm still posting pics from the last year or so of work. I'm actually getting the frame & axles ready to start re-assembling this project. I'm hoping to be finished in a few weeks.
Here's a peek at the body in the paint booth last week:
tkneese42-albums-final-pics-picture1006-paintbooth.jpg

Can't use black bed liner in texas -too hot!
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture1077-pics-copied3-053.jpg

I'll keep adding pics as it progresses.
 
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Re: 74 Scout II - Windshield

This Scout had an almost perfect windshield except For the chunk missing from the inside where the rear view mirror adhesive must have been stronger than the glass. I use a bunch of different kinds of adhesives & fillers in the my regular job, so I found what I thought would be the clearest I could get & repaired it myself (safelite people told me they don't do this kind of repair job).
Here's the windshield out of the frame:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture989-74scout-windshield2.jpg

Closeup:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture990-74scout-windshield4.jpg

This is the adhesive/filler I used. I think it's a polyester product, similar to bondo (smells a lot like it) that uses a very clear, liquid hardener. It's made for joining seams in granite countertops:
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture991-74scout-windshield5.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture992-74scout-windshield6.jpg

You have to really work it in to push out any voids. Then this stuff takes at least 20-25 minutes to set-up. At that point you can take a razor blade (hold it perpendicular to the glass) & scrape it flush with the glass.
tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture993-74scout-windshield7.jpg

tkneese42-albums-build-photos-picture994-74scout-windshield10.jpg

The last step is to take steel wool & polish the surface -
it won't hurt the glass. This filler/adhesive cured with a lot of tiny air bubbles in it. Not too concerned in this case because this spot will be covered with the mirror. But, if I had do-overs here, I would have tried a 5-minute 2-part epoxy that dries clear. The 3m brand that I buy at a local lumber yard says it dries clear on the label. Maybe a better & cheaper fix?
 
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