2jakes
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 9,680
- Location
- Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
I think my father's work truck, which was a Chevrolet panel truck, had a hand throttle but I don't remember him ever using it. All the switches on the dash were push-pull knobs, too, I think, like for the lights. The starter was a pedal on the floor. The truck belonged to the company he worked for but for all I remember, it may not have been a Chevy. Perhaps a Dodge. Pretty sure it wasn't a Ford or Studebaker. He was still using it when he left the company in 1963.
When I mentioned the two-speed transmission, the car I was thinking of was a Chevy Vega, from around 1970. It was an automatic and was not exactly sporty. It looked nice, though.
On my Chevrolet truck I have a crank near the top of the dash which opens up the front windows.
This is my A/C system for 1946.
To start my 1939 Ford panel truck.
1. Flip switch on the steering column to on.
2. Next press the starter button on the dash.
3. Press the floor pedal to get in going.
If I haven't driven the truck in several days, I need to be patient until
the mechanical fuel pump decides to give me fuel to start the engine.
Not too keen on the ’39 Ford color, but it’s original & in great shape.
And surprisingly, the 1939 license plates are also the same color and
I’ve had them for many years in all kinds of weather and they still
retain that “bloody” color.
I’m not sure what the folks were thinking when they installed a
rear-view mirror inside the panel truck.
Last edited: