benjy
Well-Known Member
- benjy Well-Known Member
Hello all! I'm excited to be officially joining the community with a build log. Back in 2010 when I finished my undergrad program, I built a rock crawler. It was a fun way reward myself for all that book work, and create something with my hands. I'm an Accountant, and really need to do something other than stare at a computer screen when I get home from work. It ended up with a 6.0L LQ4, TH400 trans, Atlas 2 speed t-case, D60 front/14B rear, detroits, coilovers, air bumps, custom cage, boatsides, etc. It was a ton of fun to build and play with. I sold that off a few years ago because life changes... it's not a very kid friendly hobby when it gets that extreme.
As I have been wrapping up a master's program, so I thought it would be fun to take on another car project. The goblin checked all the boxes for me. I really didn't want to do a lot of metal fabrication on this project. I love that the goblin is more wrenching than fabbing. I was still toying with the idea when the deal of the century was posted on the forum in February. I sent him a deposit within 2 hours of the ad being listed. I picked it up in early March, driving the donor home 600+ miles from Denver to Southern Utah with the chassis and parts in the back of a friend's truck.
I wrapped up the master's about a month and a half ago, but have had a really hard time finding a groove of when to work on it. I'd wrench most of a Saturday, then feel the wrath of neglecting the family. I have 6 year old twin girls, and have found it a lot harder to come by time to build than my pre-kid life when I built the Jeep. However, week before last I decided to try working on it in the mornings before work, and I think I finally found my groove. I have been getting up at 5am, working for about an hour, then getting off to work. It can be frustrating only getting a little done each day, but being able to consistently work on it, I feel like I'm making steady progress. Just this morning I wrapped up thinning the main harness.
The goal of this build is a fun car for casual drives and fair weather commuting. I live in St. George, Utah, where we have very mild winters, and hot, but short summers. We have a solid 6 months of amazing driving weather. On to the pics!
One of my favorite pics of the Jeep, on Pritchett Canyon in Moab:
Parked at the hotel parking lot in Denver, getting ready to drive the journey home:
Getting tucked away in the garage to wait out the completion of schooling:
After stripping the donor, I found loading it on a trailer was much easier than I anticipated. The rear end was already jacked up, so I just built a heavy duty furniture dolley from 2x6's and caster wheels, backed the trailer up to it, and lifted the front end with an engine hoist and pushed the car onto the trailer, couldn't have been easier:
And the current state of wiring. Which, by the way has been a lot more rewarding than I anticipated. So far I've only been thinning, but I have really enjoyed it.
As I have been wrapping up a master's program, so I thought it would be fun to take on another car project. The goblin checked all the boxes for me. I really didn't want to do a lot of metal fabrication on this project. I love that the goblin is more wrenching than fabbing. I was still toying with the idea when the deal of the century was posted on the forum in February. I sent him a deposit within 2 hours of the ad being listed. I picked it up in early March, driving the donor home 600+ miles from Denver to Southern Utah with the chassis and parts in the back of a friend's truck.
I wrapped up the master's about a month and a half ago, but have had a really hard time finding a groove of when to work on it. I'd wrench most of a Saturday, then feel the wrath of neglecting the family. I have 6 year old twin girls, and have found it a lot harder to come by time to build than my pre-kid life when I built the Jeep. However, week before last I decided to try working on it in the mornings before work, and I think I finally found my groove. I have been getting up at 5am, working for about an hour, then getting off to work. It can be frustrating only getting a little done each day, but being able to consistently work on it, I feel like I'm making steady progress. Just this morning I wrapped up thinning the main harness.
The goal of this build is a fun car for casual drives and fair weather commuting. I live in St. George, Utah, where we have very mild winters, and hot, but short summers. We have a solid 6 months of amazing driving weather. On to the pics!
One of my favorite pics of the Jeep, on Pritchett Canyon in Moab:
Parked at the hotel parking lot in Denver, getting ready to drive the journey home:
Getting tucked away in the garage to wait out the completion of schooling:
After stripping the donor, I found loading it on a trailer was much easier than I anticipated. The rear end was already jacked up, so I just built a heavy duty furniture dolley from 2x6's and caster wheels, backed the trailer up to it, and lifted the front end with an engine hoist and pushed the car onto the trailer, couldn't have been easier:
And the current state of wiring. Which, by the way has been a lot more rewarding than I anticipated. So far I've only been thinning, but I have really enjoyed it.