(Photos by Charles Wickam) – From 1961-1963 Ford produced a truck that is commonly referred to by hot rodders today as a “uni-body” truck. While this isn’t entirely accurate because the truck did have an actual frame under it, it does properly describe the fact that the entire body of the truck was one piece. Originally conceived as body a styling upgrade, bed space upgrade, and production efficiency upgrade, the trucks quickly fell out of favor with the driving public when stories of their bodies flexing under load started to make their way into the public consciousness. By the middle of 1962, Ford was scrambling to get a production line running for traditional “cab and box” trucks. They were so desperate that they sent the late 62/early 63 trucks out into the world with the same bed used on 1960 models! Ford quickly ceased production of the one piece bodies and that was that. Sadly, they were known to rust faster and worse than “regular trucks” and relatively few exist today. Of those “relatively few” we have seen some awesome examples of “uni-body” Fords turned into cruisers and customs, but this one built by Missouri’s Ryno Built Hot Rods and Customs is our favorite by a country mile. Charles Wickam shot these photos recently and we wanted to share them with you along with some additional information on a truck that Ryno himself built virtually all aspects of….insane panel paint included.
Technically speaking we’re looking at a 1961 Ford F-100 with a 1962 grill. After that, we’re looking at a whole lot of work and man hours of fabrication, paint, and massaging to get this truck to look as it currently does. Built in 2011 and 2012, Ryno found the truck cruising the internet shortly after he had worked on another one for a customer. A deal was struck and he got it back into his shop where he decided to go with a Mustang II style front end, 3-link style rear with 9″-axle, a full boxing of the frame, which he also Z’d on both ends to completely and utterly nail the stance, along with raising the bed floor, and working on custom crossmembers to tuck the driveline so it could lay out as you see in the photos. He went with 14″ Truespoke Supreme wheels front and back, a hot little 289 that has pushed the truck down the drag strip at nearly 100mph, air bags on the corners, a Mustang fuel tank, and the show stopping paint job you see in the photos below.
The best part of this truck for us is that it is used and used often. Ryno has cruised it thousands of miles since building it, including one nearly 1,700 mile trip to Austin, Texas and back shortly after construction and paint were completed. As you’ll see in the photos and captions below, we’re in love with the panel paint job. Creatively, it takes an appreciation for color and design to pull one off and have it look as good as this one does. When panel paint is good, it is great. When it is bad, you want to dump chlorine in your eyes to burn the imagery out of them. From the panel painted cooler to the use of the red Mustang buckets in the truck and the 289 under the hood, this is one of the neatest custom trucks we have had on the electronic pages of BangShift ever.
We’ll stop yapping now so you can see the photos and details below. They really are something else and Ryno’s craftsmanship shines through on this truck from end to end. His shop does everything from stuff like this to pro touring builds, to whatever a customer can dream up. He’s a talented dude and one we hope to run into at an event soon (because we want a ride in the damned truck!),
CLICK HERE TO VISIT THE RYNO BUILT HOT RODS AND CUSTOMS FACEBOOK PAGE — GIVE THE MAN A LIKE!
- Again with the damned details! It takes some restraint not to go whole hog and do the entire door panel in lace, but the little window access panel touched up looks perfect to us.
- Again, details. The fact that the dashboard on this truck looks nicer than anything we’ll ever own is a little depressing, but it also made us stare for minutes on end. Ryno knows lace!
- Here are the red Mustang seats which again speak to Ryno’s use of color as they seemingly jump right out at you when peering into the truck.
- To achieve this level of laid outed-ness (Yep, just made that up), Ryno took the stock frame rails, boxed and Z’d them at both ends, used a Mustang II style front suspension (with bags), did a custom 3-link outback (also with bags), raised the bed floor, and made sure to keep the oil pan above the crossmember.
- From the rear you get another great look at the clean lines and great contrast between the wild lace paint and stately grey used all over most of the truck.
- We’re suckers for panel style paint jobs around here so when Charles sent us these photos of the truck, we were panting like dogs on a 90-degree day.
- We dig the spartan factory dash with a couple of gauges to monitor the health of engine vitals. The Mustang shifter and custom made console are nice ways to finish the cab without making it all over the top and street roddy.
- The truck was built by Ryno Built Hot Rods and Customs located in southwestern Missouri. Ryno did all the fab work, paint, and conceptual stuff on this truck. We think he nailed it all around.
- Detail stuff like this drives us wild. Total perfection.
- That license place curl was not done in the shop. It was earned on the road. We love the sanitary look of this tailgate. Simple in a really elegant way.
- Why is their stuff in the back? Simple, this truck gets used, driven, and cruised lots. Hell, Ryno drove it almost 1,700 miles round trip to the Lone Star Roundup this year.
- Just because we love panel paint jobs doesn’t mean they are all good. They can be disasters if done wrong. Ryno obviously has a great eye for color and how to make this huge group of seemingly incongruous panels make your eye dance all over the truck.
- That’s right kids, no Chevy power here. The truck is motivated by a nice little 289ci small block Ford.
Laying flat on the ground is not a “stance”. It’s stupid. It looks like there’s no suspension under the truck. It looks…useless.
Not a useless truck at all. Saw it at Mo-Kan Dragway a few weeks ago being used to tow a nostalgia blown Hemi dragster back from it’s passes.
I followed the Build Thread on the HAMB
http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=612409
And for all you lovers of Lace, Candy, Flake, Panel Paint, etc, here is a thread you will like
http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=257556
……and as a side note, whilst searching for the build thread above, I found another thread, looks like the Uni is now FOR SALE??
http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=812587
Those trucks are not that rare, there are still quite a few around here in Canada. And they don’t seem to rust any worse than the normal half tons do.