Sooper Camper
Adventurer
Well, now is as good of a time as any to start a thread. I've been a lurker a while now here, had another screen name when I had a van (forgot that name lol) and the van went on to a better place. I'm a bit of a Ford guy, and always been a nut about the mid-70's trucks. One model in particular always stood out to me as being a little more special than the rest. The F350 "Super Camper Special":
What made this truck so cool was the odd wheelbase (140") for a single cab long bed, the idea behind pushing the axle back was better weight distribution when loaded down. It necessitated putting the tire in the secret compartment on the bed, since it wouldn't fit behind the rear axle anymore. They were made to haul monstrosities like that camper around, and be rode hard and put away wet. They only made the trucks in 2wd, but they came with the strongest of the strong parts back in the day; dual piston 13" discs and 12-13" drums in back, equal length 1" king pin forged I beams, 35 spline Dana 70 rear axles, and the same frame that was used on Cab and Chassis/flat bed models. The vertical cross section of the frame is about double what a F250 has. They also came spec'd for up to a 10,000 lb GVW...mind you empty the trucks weighed around 4-4500lbs. Serious payload capacity. I'd been looking off and on for one for about 6-7 years when I finally saw one pop up on craiglist for $750. I waited. $600...$400...then a few months later $300 and 30 miles closer to me. Couldn't resist at this point, so it followed me home in non-running condition:
As you can see, its definitely been a work truck and worked hard, but all the guts were in reasonable shape. The kid who had it had no idea what the words "ignition timing", "vacuum leak", "starting fluid", "coolant", and "spark plugs" apparently meant. Some one had rigged a Holley carb onto it, but neglected to use the proper spacer and there was a huge intake leak hiding underneath. It would eventually fire up, go right to redline and then sputter out. The oil reeked of fuel, plugs were choo choo train black, and the timing was way off; it needed a fluid change something awful and there were plenty of other random bits that were in bad shape too.
overall, the engine bay was pretty ugly too

What made this truck so cool was the odd wheelbase (140") for a single cab long bed, the idea behind pushing the axle back was better weight distribution when loaded down. It necessitated putting the tire in the secret compartment on the bed, since it wouldn't fit behind the rear axle anymore. They were made to haul monstrosities like that camper around, and be rode hard and put away wet. They only made the trucks in 2wd, but they came with the strongest of the strong parts back in the day; dual piston 13" discs and 12-13" drums in back, equal length 1" king pin forged I beams, 35 spline Dana 70 rear axles, and the same frame that was used on Cab and Chassis/flat bed models. The vertical cross section of the frame is about double what a F250 has. They also came spec'd for up to a 10,000 lb GVW...mind you empty the trucks weighed around 4-4500lbs. Serious payload capacity. I'd been looking off and on for one for about 6-7 years when I finally saw one pop up on craiglist for $750. I waited. $600...$400...then a few months later $300 and 30 miles closer to me. Couldn't resist at this point, so it followed me home in non-running condition:
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As you can see, its definitely been a work truck and worked hard, but all the guts were in reasonable shape. The kid who had it had no idea what the words "ignition timing", "vacuum leak", "starting fluid", "coolant", and "spark plugs" apparently meant. Some one had rigged a Holley carb onto it, but neglected to use the proper spacer and there was a huge intake leak hiding underneath. It would eventually fire up, go right to redline and then sputter out. The oil reeked of fuel, plugs were choo choo train black, and the timing was way off; it needed a fluid change something awful and there were plenty of other random bits that were in bad shape too.





overall, the engine bay was pretty ugly too
