So I have had my pickup sitting in my driveway for the last two years unused 
http://evalbum.com/1524.  The brakes on it were always pretty sketchy.  One of 
the front cylinders developed a leak, and that led to air getting into the 
brake lines, and it was winter when working on cars is not quite as much fun, 
so I pulled it off the road until I could replace the failed parts.  In the 
meantime it did not make sense to keep paying insurance on the vehicle.  I have 
multiple teenage drivers in my home so even with just liability the insurance 
was $75 a month.  Then since I was not insuring it there was no reason to keep 
the registration current etc..   Once the weather got nicer, I did get the 
replacement parts and install them, but my first couple of shots at getting the 
brakes working as good as they had before the failure did not work out as well 
as I had planned, and they were really barely ever adequate.  So instead of 
putting the truck back on the road it went into project hibernation mode and 
time steadily marched on. 

Finally, last summer I got back around to the truck and started calling around 
and researching what it would take to upgrade my front brakes from drums to 
disc.  It was actually pretty tough to figure out how to get it done at a 
reasonable cost.  I found some people that sold some kits.  I talked to a local 
shop that talked to their Datsun person etc... but all the solutions I found 
were either overpriced or just looked like they might be a bigger project than 
I was capable of doing on my own.  I did find one homebrew kit that was 
affordable, a little under $300 for the kit plus some parts that are easy to 
buy at any autoparts store, plus some that needed to be scrounged  form a 
junkyard.   Still it was hard for me to tell if my skill/tool set was adequate 
for the job.  Fortunately for me the guy who engineered and sales the kit was 
local, so I got in touch with him and decided to go for it.  I went over to his 
house and saw the kit installed on his truck.  I also was able to see first 
hand  the installation procedure and even talked him into making a junkyard run 
with me so I was sure to get the right parts.  Now I was confident I could get 
the job done so I paid him my money and waited for the kit to get made.  He is 
just a hobbiest like many of us, and he had gathered several orders and was in 
the process of putting them together.  There were several pieces that needed to 
be machined, and apparently the machining gets done by another hobbiest, so 
summer ended and fall faded well into winter before my kit was ready to go.  
Again, winter in the NW is not my favorite time to work on cars.  Even when I 
clear enough room in my garage to work on cars it still means leaving the 
garage door open as my garage is just not that large, so I tend to do most my 
home automotive work in my driveway.

I caught a real break though as I got back in touch with my guy, and we decided 
to do the install at his house so that he could get some new install video to 
go along with his kits.  He had me drop the truck off on a Wednesday so he 
could do some prep work and some videos by himself and I would come over on 
Saturday to finish the job up.  Well, what do you know, he decided just to go 
ahead and do the whole install himself as he prefers to do the videos on his 
own without an audience so when I showed up on Saturday all we had left was to 
bleed the brake lines.  So now my truck has some nice shiny disk brakes on the 
front and stops soooooooo much better.  I don't know if all cars had terrible 
brakes in 1970 or if mine were in especially bad shape, but I am so much 
happier with the truck now.

It is still sitting in my driveway with a car cover on it, but everything works 
on it again.  I've just decided that before I put it back on the road I am 
going to do another one of the jobs that I have always wanted to take care of 
which is get some of the interior restoration done.  I'm going to at least 
reupholster the bench seat before putting it back on the road.  I know that I 
need to do this before I start driving it because once it is back on the road I 
won't want to stop driving it long enough to pull the seat out and get the job 
done.

To be honest, I was not sure I would ever drive this truck again, especially 
with all the new OEM electric options the car makers are coming up with.  I 
thought I might just sell it cheap on ebay and get out of the DIY EV scene for 
good, but now that the brakes are sorted, I'm excited to get back to my truck.  
I've taken it around the block a few times to test the brakes and it is so fun 
to drive my truck again...

Anyway, after I redo the seat I will probably put it back on the road with it's 
flooded nicads for the summer and then see if I can finally upgrade to that 
lithium pack I've always dreamed of before winter sets in :)

damon                                     
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