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Just Another 1932 Ford Black Deuce

Look Again. George Poteet's Five-Window Is More Than...
February, 2009
By Damon Lee
Photography by Rich Chenet
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CHASSIS:
Builder Dave Lane started with American Stamping rails, which he boxed, pinched (front), and kicked up (back). The wheelbase is stretched an inch. A flat front crossmember supports a Durant monoleaf spring, Pete & Jake's 4-inch dropped axle, TCI spindles, and So-Cal brakes. The oval-shaped windows on the '48 Ford wishbones match those on the axle. A Flaming River steering box, Deuce Factory shackles and lower shock mounts, and modified So-Cal upper shock mounts round out the frontend. Out back you'll find a Winters mini banjo rearend bouncing on a transverse leaf spring. Virtually everything on the chassis glistens with show-quality paint, polished stainless, or chrome by Wright's Custom Chrome Plating (Grafton, OH).
WHEELS & TIRES:
To help create that vintage vibe, George and Dave sprayed pale yellow paint on Wheel Vintiques wires (15x5 and 16x7), then wrapped 'em in 5.60x15 Firestone bias-plies (front) and 8.90x16 Firestone dirt trackers.
DRIVETRAIN:
A fresh-from-the-crate Ford Motorsport 351 was made to look old by adapting vintage Thunderbird valve covers and adding a trio of Holley two-barrels (detailed by Holley's custom shop) with O'Brien Truckers air cleaners. The block and heads were ground smooth and painted black. Finishing touches include a Mallory distributor, MSD control box, Zoops pulleys, Powermaster alternator, and modified Griffin shroud on the Walker radiator. Dave tweaked the Patriot headers and custom-built the 2.5-inch JetHot-coated exhaust. A '64 Galaxie shifter is used to row gears in the Tremec five-speed.
BODY & PAINT:
Think this body is stock? Think again! Dave installed Brookville roadster quarter-panels and made custom rear corner extensions to tidy up the fit between the body, frame, and Tanks Inc. gas tank. He also chopped the top an inch, stretched the four-piece Rootlieb hood a like amount, and pie-cut the hood tops 3/8 inch in front. The Brookville grille shell has a Bob Drake insert and a custom CamelToe Racing bullnose emblem by MotorHead Jewelry. Headlights are '33 commercial units with '50 Pontiac items out back. As with almost everything else, Dave gets credit for the near-flawless DuPont ChromaPremier Super Jet Black paint, which is accented with subtle Josh Shaw striping.
INTERIOR:
The metalwork doesn't stop outside, as the interior sports a narrowed '40 Ford dash with a custom gauge cluster from Classic Instruments (George and Dave picked the fonts and colors and had Classic Instruments add the CamelToe Racing logo). Other tricks include a handmade speaker grille, plus custom dash and shift knobs made by Dennis Crooks (Quality Restorations). Dennis also gets credit for the scaled-down '40 Ford wheel on the Cornhusker Rod & Custom column. Kudos go to Steve Pearson (Clinton, IA) for stitching the white-and-pale-yellow-leather tuck 'n' roll that covers the modified Glide seat and various interior panels. The electrical system is based around a Centech panel.


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