I am embarking on the second restoration of my 1970 Ford F100 4X4. The truck as it sits now is stock except that when I last redid it about 15 years ago I added a rebuilt power steering box from a later Ford pickup, and a vacuum brake booster. Those two upgrades made it very nice to drive, but even with a brand new front end the steering was always a little vague. It would tramline, there was an inch of play and it wandered a lot. So for this rebuild I want it to drive like a modern truck. I have that opportunity because it needs the second makeover thanks to terminal rust and I am going to start with a rust free cab and box. Which means there will not be much left of old blue when I am done. So that has me thinking about my options.
First, I am not sure if my steering was typical of trucks of that era or did I get a bad box? I just don't remember generally how late sixties trucks drove back then. SO do I maybe just need to rebuild it stock with better quality components?
Second option would be to swap the frame out to one from a 1973 - 1979 generation. I would get disc brakes and a different front end. This frame is also wider which may help things. This is a common swap so the problems have been solved multiple times. But would the steering be better? I don't know. I don't want an incremental improvement, I want it to drive like my 2008 dodge; 300000 km and its still one finger steering.
Third option is to go for a much newer frame and get modern underpinnings. This will get into the realm of the unknown and I think I would need to do some major cutting and hacking. Problem solved, but at what cost?
Any input welcome. When we get this sorted out you can help me choose a drivetrain.