hello all,
will a 110 sinlge cab go on a 90 td5 chassis always been a dream of mine and does anyone know where i can source a cab from without having to buy a entire ute would considr it if cheap enough and would like to not have to deal with rust as already working on a wb kingswood any info appreciated
cheers.
Are you thinking of a truck cab, or a cab chassis?
If truck cab, it's a factory configuration, so shouldn't be hard, if you can find the parts, as truck cabs are rare in Aus
If cab chassis, the body would be doable using the rear bulkhead from a 130, but the mounts for the body and a tray probably aren't on the chassis.
If your planning on starting with a new chassis, I suspect you'll never get it registered, as it will be considered a 2025 build, and will need to comply with current regulations.
Your first port of call needs to be your state registration authority and an engineer.
Tony
i'm half heartly got a 110 single cab (cab chassis) 300 tdi for sale. has a crack in chassis and some minor rust in rear cross member and a cracked head that has caused me to pause on the restoration. it's in rough shape being a former farm ute, but perfect to pick off what you want and sell off the balance. Being a 110 cab chassis, it will give you the roof and back glass but afaik the rear bulkhead will be different to a 90 truck cab. You could potentially cut out the bulkhead from the 110 and fit it internally to the 90 panels to replicate the 90 truck cab. PM me if you are interested to talk.
MLD
Current: (Diggy) MY10 D130 ute, locked F&R, air suspension and rolling on 35's.
Current: (but in need of TLC) 200tdi 110 ute & a 300tdi 110 ute.
Current: (Steed) MY11 Audi RS5 phantom black (the daily driver)
Gone: (Dorothy) MY99 TD5 D110
If you just put an old chassis number on the new chassis, you are "rebirthing" and old car this is illegal.
You need to to talk to your registration authority as to how you go about a chassis swap, I suspect it's different in each state.
If you are doing mods that will need engineering, then talk to your engineer before you start, to ensure what your doing is engineer able.
Good luck with the project.
Tony
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! |
Search All the Web! |
|---|
|
|
|
Bookmarks