ScorBajio
- DPDISXR4Ti
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ScorBajio
No, I'm not ready to take on this project, but I thought I'd share the idea in case someone wants to try it or even just Photochop it up. The idea, in case you haven't figured it out, would be to "convert" a Scorpio into a Subaru Baja-like "cruck".
Unlike what I'm building, you really wouldn't need a Baja donor, although that would be a possibility if you wanted a functional tail-gate. But with what I've learned, the glove-fit approach of combining the two bodies is much more difficult than simply cutting and fabricating as needed.
Any way, I'm happy to provide any input if someone wants to take it on.
Unlike what I'm building, you really wouldn't need a Baja donor, although that would be a possibility if you wanted a functional tail-gate. But with what I've learned, the glove-fit approach of combining the two bodies is much more difficult than simply cutting and fabricating as needed.
Any way, I'm happy to provide any input if someone wants to take it on.
Brad
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Interesting idea. I was thinking more along the Baja approach, where the lower portion below the window hinges up should you need to load in some 2x4's or whatever. The rear seats would stay as original - the trunk would become a short bed.Freejack wrote:Hmm, interesting idea. I would say, model it more off the Avalanche than anything, with a small removeable back window and the ability to lay down the seats to retain the cargo capacity.
Brad
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I wonder if there a small truck bed that will drop into the area behind the seats after the hatch is removed. The Scorpio would make a nifty short bed truck like the Ridgeline. Maybe turn the spare tire well into a lockable compartment. But how would you close off the back of the cab area?
Scott Williams
Roseland, New Jersey
1989 Merkur Scorpio, Strato Silver Auto-Flex High Gloss Coating, euro headlamps, euro tail lamps, custom wheels
2019 Ford Flex SEL, AWD, SYNC3, Pwr. Liftgate, Premium Audio
2014 Ford Flex SEL, AWD, Towing, Appearance Pkg.
2000 Volvo SE, Our Florida Car
Roseland, New Jersey
1989 Merkur Scorpio, Strato Silver Auto-Flex High Gloss Coating, euro headlamps, euro tail lamps, custom wheels
2019 Ford Flex SEL, AWD, SYNC3, Pwr. Liftgate, Premium Audio
2014 Ford Flex SEL, AWD, Towing, Appearance Pkg.
2000 Volvo SE, Our Florida Car
- DPDISXR4Ti
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The bed portion wouldn't need to be a match at all. In fact, you wouldn't even need a truck bed donor unless you wanted a tailgate and matching tail-lights. But if you did, it would just be a matter of cutting the truck-bed floor to the right size along with the inner upright walls and piecing it together. Given the benefit of my expereince in doing it the wrong way , I now know it would be way easier to section in a couple pieces rather than fit the whole bed in as one. Ironically enough, this is precisely what Rob Booth told me to do before I even started the project. But why would I listen to somebody that actually knows what they're doing?MagentaRed wrote:I wonder if there a small truck bed that will drop into the area behind the seats after the hatch is removed. The Scorpio would make a nifty short bed truck like the Ridgeline. Maybe turn the spare tire well into a lockable compartment. But how would you close off the back of the cab area?
Same deal with the back wall/window - just use the panel from a Ranger, Chevy S-10 or whatever and trim it down to size. More I think about it, I DO like Jake's idea of having that panel be entirely removeable, for those times when you need to move something like a refrigerator perhaps. You'd just need to beef up the perimeter a bit better - a square tube roll-bar could work well, and provide a nice flat surface for the back panel to bolt to.
Lastly, the one thing I've discoverd is that hatchbacks in general make a better platform for these type of conversions. Given that a hatchback doesn't have that upright rear panel in the first place, the floor pan needs to be that much stronger in the first place.
Brad
That's exactly why you'd want that area open. The standard for cargo capacity is a 4x8 sheet of ply. Of course, there is only 3' of space between the wells on a Scorpio, but you can fit a 4' sheet at an angle.DPDISXR4Ti wrote:More I think about it, I DO like Jake's idea of having that panel be entirely removeable, for those times when you need to move something like a refrigerator perhaps. You'd just need to beef up the perimeter a bit better - a square tube roll-bar could work well, and provide a nice flat surface for the back panel to bolt to.
Not that I would do it, but if I did, this is how (now why does that sound familiar?).
- Remove the hatch completely
- Convert the rear of the hatch into a downward folding tailgate, so that when open it is level with the floor of the cargo area. This will likely require some modification to the bumper are, creating a stepdown for the tailgate.
- Convert the split rear seat into a one piece unit with weather seals.
- Add a small upper rear glass
- one of the challenges will be what to do with the C-pillar glass. Whether to leave it, remove it, open that area up, etc.
Jake
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Bah humbug - that's only got 2 doors and no rear seating.dimswits wrote:No photoshop is necessary, I suggest you guys hit google for "ford P100."
FWIW (not much, I realize), I'd propose moving the rear seats up a bit and the seat-backs more upright, to get the rear window panel as far forward as possible.
Brad
I know of one for sale!
Hey, Brad, I think you should buy the one you stuck poor Don with. Who of course, stuck me with.
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Re: I know of one for sale!
Nah, you invested too much in the paint job - I couldn't bring myself to hack that up.67King wrote:Hey, Brad, I think you should buy the one you stuck poor Don with. Who of course, stuck me with.
Brad
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Put away the keyboard, Brad...
Put away the keyboard, Brad...
Finish up that XRBrati or whatever it is, THEN get going on the Scorpio. There's no point in trying to find company in misery, nobody's going to build one, so you might as well get at it.
Report back when you're done.
Finish up that XRBrati or whatever it is, THEN get going on the Scorpio. There's no point in trying to find company in misery, nobody's going to build one, so you might as well get at it.
Report back when you're done.
It's not a hobby, it's an obsession!
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No worries Mike. I've already got too many projects in mid-flight - taking on another major one like this would be suicidal. But I still think it's a "good" idea for someone looking to do something unique with a Scorpio. One of the big advantages of these cars being available for cheap money is the ability to try something like this with minimal monetary risk. Sorta reminds me of what we used to say about the Industrial Arts majors at Oswego.... "IA, IA, build a project and then throw it away!"
Brad