Reproduction Parts for 1916-1964 Chevrolet Passenger Cars & 1918-1987 Chevrolet & GMC Trucks



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Clement
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#478394 02/01/2023 5:47 PM
by 46ChevyTruck
46ChevyTruck
Hello! I stumbled across this form this morning while trying to find a diagram for/any information on the wood plank sizes for the bed of a 1946 Chevy 1/2 ton truck. In doing so I realized that my bed must be from an earlier model, because I only have six boards.

I purchased my truck a few years ago from a gentleman in illinois. According to the title, and what little bit he knew about it, it lived its life as a farm truck in Kansas. My husband and I are currently in the process of complete restoration, with the exception of painting and modernizing it. I took my odometer apart, cleaned it up, and got it to working order (as far as I can tell), and I'm trying to find out how to rewire it for a 12-volt, and make it functional again. Other than that, everything is staying the same cosmetic-wise... especially the interior.

We've been fortunate enough to find pretty much all of the parts we need, including a few NOS parts which was really cool. I took it down to the frame, sans the cab, and applied POR15 last year, I took all of the metal trim off and cleaned it up, the dash...everything I could remove with a screwdriver, my hands, and a Dremel (blasted clutch head screws!) Aside from having my quilt shop logo hand painted and distressed on the doors, and hopefully finding some rims with tangs and painting them, everything will be as it is in the picture.

Thank you for the add! I look forward to checking out all of the forums.

Maria
Southern Indiana
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#478401 Feb 1st a 07:11 PM
by Stovblt
Stovblt
Welcome!!

Nice to have another truck enthusiast here, and especially one with a 1946!
As you cans see from my avatar, I'm a '46 owner as well.
My truck came from Kansas as well, and was built in the Kansas City plant.
Maybe yours was too?
If your serial number begins with the number 5, our trucks are siblings.

I'm with Rusty on the 12v conversion.
I wouldn't think of converting mine, as the 6 volt system works perfectly well.
And I don't have to worry about converting lights, gauges, charging system components, etc etc.
We run both 6 and 12 volt systems on the farm and I've never noticed any difference in how fast the starters crank, or how long they will crank.
As Rusty says, pay attention to the gauge (thickness) of the battery cables if you are replacing them, and 6 volts are just fine.

Regarding the pickup bed,
that isn't really my field as I own a stake bed 3/4 ton,
But I do recall reading/seeing something about a change in the number of boards used at some point.
IF the change was at the 1946 1st design or even the 2nd design model year, don't assume you have the wrong pickup bed just yet.
Chev didn't just throw the old design parts away, so there are cases of overlap between years on some otherwise inconsequential details.

PS
Some of us here have seen some strange undocumented things with TRUCKS that were immediately post war.
My truck, for example, still has the leather grommet at the gasoline tank filler.
Every source I know says leather was used DURING the war but was rubber again by the 1946 2nd design model.
Not so.

Again, welcome!
I think you've found the best, most congenial vintage Chevrolet site on the internet.

PS
We love pictures!
And we'd like to see more!
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#480129 Mar 27th a 04:29 AM
by IdahoLemon
IdahoLemon
Welcome Maria,

You have indeed come to a good site to learn and be learned from. I can tell you, the guys you have received comments from already are great sources, esp Stovebit, from my personal experience.

I own a ’45 1/2 ton, Model BK. She also has 6 boards and I’m sure it is the original bed. The boards have been protected by a piece of sheet steel for most of her life.

I’m another one of those 6V guys. I’ve found no drawbacks and IMO, being able to keep so much as original is easiest.

Rarely have I looked at the New Members - Questions Forum. I came to it tonight because I’m on a personal VCCA Forum promotional campaign. OMO, by far, the quickest and easiest way to get a question answered here at VCCA is to Google it, then tag on VCCA.

Since Models remained the same for several years, to cover all the bases in your search, you need to list the years. For instance, I did a search on your question about bed boards. This went in the Google search box as; “1941, 1942, 1945, 1946 chevy truck bed boards, vcca”. It turned up one very long thread that took place in 2017. Several comments into it, ONE SENTENCE talked about 6 boards being in the bed. In fact, the questioner found out the truck in question was not a 1941, it was a 1945!

Look forward to seeing more from you.

Jake
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