The truck is rock solid rust free and has been painted (partially painted) by the previous shop as a ten footer. Spent late into the evening going over what has been done so far and trying to pick a way forward that will work for the owner .
The two immediate things that need to be sorted are the EFI and the rear axle. The engine is a flathead and according to the owner and the shop who got it this far, it "runs real good" with this TBI from Affordable Fuel Injection. I personally have not seen it run. It has not moved under its own power and there is the rub: They also installed an AOD gearbox. AOD gearboxes MUST have a TV cable in order to function.Failure to establish the correct cable actuation ratio between the intake and the AOD will kill the AOD.
The linkage on the TBI is not only in front of the TB but it rotated in the wrong direction. Going to require a Rube Goldberk gizmo to resolve this. Or a $300 carb.
The other observation came about when one of the peoples in attendance asked "Am I the only one who sees something weird with the rear wheels? They look cambered." So I grabbed a square and had a look. Floor is pretty much level. Both sides are like this. Last I checked solid axles were not supposed to have camber. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
There must have been a contest for how much wiring you can put in a 1950 ford truck. It arrived with a freshly installed Painless 21 circuit harness. But for reasons that elude me rather than install the harness as designed, the installer chose to cut every circuit and install a relay and a circuit breaker. There are 6 extra circuit breakers shown in the picture in line with 6 fused circuits. You can just see the edge of the relay field in this picture.
Here is a better shot of the field of relays. They went to far as to put a relay in the Dakota Digital shift lever indicator circuit. What does that circuit carry a fraction of an amp? While it is nice that each function is marked with painters tape and legible writing, NONE of these relays are needed.
AC is installed, just needs hoses and charging.
It would have been in this picture, but when I gave it a tug to see where a wire bundle disappeared to, it fell off the little ledge that was supporting the one corner. Not bolted to anything and held in by the wires.
Then there is this audio amplifier. Not needed for anything, just there.
All this plus a circuit breaker and relay in circuit, just to know what gear you are in.
If you note there is a back of a gauge to the right. Seems it was important to have oil pressure and voltage gauges face the inside of the engine bay. Of course none of the gauges are fastened in the pods.
The original plan of attack was to start doing brake and fuel plumbing, but now I need to drop the rear axle and check to see what is bent. Someone welded axle extensions from a different axle on to this one, and I suspect that is going to play a part.