1956 Ford F-100 - Orange Crate
Pro-Built Family Affair
/ By Richard Miller, Jeremy Cook
/ illustrators: Jeremy Cook
/
Article provided by: Classic Trucks Magazine
I was recently discharged from the army and was back home on the ranch where the family business was orchard care. I was living in El Modeno, California, (the east end of the city of Orange) in 1966, when I first saw my '56 Ford pickup. I was driving down the street and there it was parked in the front yard. There was a for sale sign on it, so I stopped and paid the guy $600. It seemed like a fair price. It was a six-cylinder, three-on-the-tree F-100. The left front fender had been repaired, but that was the only apparent damage--so I drove it home. I was now the proud owner of a truck that would still be with me 37 years later. The next night, in our old red barn, I pulled the engine and the transmission to make way for the balanced and blueprinted 327 I acquired from my brother Bob. I sold the old engine and transmission for $700, and, at that point, was ahead 100 bucks. I bought a four-speed hydro GMC transmission, installed it, and drove the truck for the next fifteen years.
I married my wife Randi in 1969. I drove the truck as an everyday work vehicle, and the weekends saw us taking many trips to the dump as we worked on our new home in Yorba Linda. As we looked forward to the birth of our son, we counted our cars and decided we could sell the truck in order to keep our '68 California Special Mustang and pay the hospital and doctor bills for the new baby. With a heavy heart, we sold our baby blue truck to my youngest brother Michael. That $1,600 went a long ways back in 1971.
Many years passed and we still had the Mustang which we were showing at the Orange Plaza car show where brother Michael had joined us. That's when Randi began convincing him to sell the truck back to us. A year later, after much cajoling, he agreed, and the truck was coming home. He sold it to us for $6,000, which was what he had put into it. Randi thought we were buying a drivable truck to buzz around in on the weekends like the old days. Instead, it was in parts--many parts. I was not daunted, knowing that I was going to restore it to a glory it had never known.
We began work on it in 2000 by sending it to Pro Design Hot Rods. Michael had some suspension work done by Mike Filion and thought their work was great. This turned out to be a collaboration that was exciting, educational, and always interesting. They are professionals who care about the cars and their clients. I decided from the start that our truck was due for a Ford motor. I ordered a 514 SVO big-block crate motor and bought a built C6 transmission. The truck has a Volare front clip and a 9-inch Ford rearend. We wanted to make some subtle changes but keep the truck true to the original look--no shaving of door handles or badges. We kept the stock exterior and dash. All the gauges were recalibrated to match the new motor. Now the speedometer registers to 120 mph. We had the truck painted a pearl orange at Paint N Place in Anaheim. Jerry had painted our Mustang a few years before, so we thought of him first. I had always pictured it in a bright, glowing intense color, which turned out to be House of Kolor Ultra Orange Pearl. It glows golden on all the curved metal. The all-leather interior was stitched by Francisco of Bill's Auto Upholstery. These people are true artists. It was a pleasure to work with them, as they are both supportive and helpful. We started with a Glide Engineering seat, then had Francisco create all the molding and lumbar support. It took many trips to the shop to decide on just the right color for the leather, carpet, and the suede headliner. A customized Ford oval with the embossed "MILLER" is under the back window--a subtle touch attributed to my wife. In fact, she's the one who decided to go for all leather for the seats. No vinyl in this truck.
In all, my truck took 2 1/2 years to complete. Brandon Smith of Pro Design spent countless hours massaging this truck to its present glory. No one could have given it as much attention and care as this man did. I should have known since his daily driver is an F-100. One of the questions we have been asked is "What would we do differently if we had to do it over again?" Absolutely nothing! We ran into very few snags and were lucky to have joined with the professionals who made this dream come true for us. I never could have done this work in a home garage and ended up with a truck with this degree of detail. Besides, we wanted to finish it and enjoy it. Yes, we drive it to the shows. This truck is no trailer queen. It's been part of our family for 37 years, and I hope we enjoy it for another 37. Our son Jason really has his eye on the old family truck. I know he hopes it stays in the family.
| F A C T S & F I G U R E S |
| Richard and Randi Miller |
| Yorba Linda, California |
| 1956 Ford F-100 |
CHASSIS |
| Frame |
'56 Ford |
| Modifications |
smoothed and powdercoated, all mods by Pro Design Hot Rods, Santa Ana, CA |
| Rearend / Ratio |
Fab-9 9-inch with 31-spline axles by PDC of Brea, CA / 4.11:1 Posi |
| Rear suspension |
Total Cost Involved four-link with coilovers |
| Rear brakes |
Ford Motorsports |
| Front suspension |
Volaré clip, all components powdercoated |
| Front brakes |
custom Volaré by Pro Design |
| Master cylinder |
ABS kit under cab |
| Front wheel make, size |
Intro Emotion, 17x8 |
| Rear wheel make, size |
Intro Emotion, 20x9.5 |
| Front tire make, size |
Goodyear Eagle GT II, P225/55R17 |
| Rear tire make, size |
Goodyear Eagle GT II, P285/50R20 |
| Gas tank |
24-gallon powdercoated aluminum by Pro Design |
ENGINE |
| Year and make |
'02 Ford SVO crate |
| Displacement |
514 ci |
| Camshaft |
Ford roller |
| Heads |
Aluminum SVO Cobra Jet |
| Valve covers |
Ford SVO |
| Manifold / Induction |
Edelbrock Victor Jr. / Holley 920 by C&J Engineering |
| Ignition / Wires |
MSD Ignition |
| Headers |
custom by Mesa Muffler, Costa Mesa, CA, coated by MB Performance, Santa Ana, CA |
| Exhaust / Mufflers |
handbuilt 3-inch with stainless Mac mufflers |
| Detail work |
March serpentine belt kit, H.O.K. paint, polish, or silver powdercoat for every component |
TRANSMISSION |
| Make and model |
Ford C6 |
| Modifications |
custom by Dibb's Transmission, Costa Mesa, CA |
| Shifter |
on ididit column |
BODY |
| Body style / Material |
custom cab, all steel |
| Manufacturer |
Ford |
| Fenders front/rear |
stock steel |
| Modifications |
handbuilt firewall and inner fenders, reworked running boards, channels on back of cab sectioned down 4" |
| Hood |
stock steel with tilt kit |
| Grille |
rechromed with emblem removed |
| Bed |
bed floor raised 4" to clear pumpkin, '70 Suburban wheeltubs sunken into bed wood, shaved stake pockets, smooth tailgate with hidden latches |
| Metalwork by |
Pro Design |
| Bodywork and paint by |
Paint N Place, Anaheim, CA |
| Paint type / Color |
House of Kolor / custom-mixed Ultra Orange Pearl |
| Headlights / Taillights |
stock / stock |
| Outside mirrors |
stock |
| Bumpers |
rechromed, raised, tucked |
INTERIOR |
| Dashboard |
stock / restored |
| Gauges |
restored by United Instruments |
| Steering wheel |
leather-wrapped Budnik |
| Steering column |
polished ididit |
| Seats |
modified Glide Engineering |
| Material / Color |
beige leather/ suede |
| Carpet |
beige |
| Upholstery by |
Francisco of Bill's Auto Upholstery, Brea, CA |
| Stereo |
functional '56 circular radio in dash |