Oh boy, this is definitely my 1974 FJ40 Land Cruiser. Body Rust, frame rust, one working brake. lap belts, no soft surfaces
In the late 90s I was a teenager in college and I totaled my 1987 Celica. My very, very GRM uncle told me he had a free landcruiser I could have if I wanted to fix it up. He was always tinkering, so this wasn't a surprise. His daily driver was a V8 Samurai and he always had a few interesting projects underway. I had a week vacation planned for christmas so I took a bus to Long Island...way out on the island, nearly the Hamptons. He likely acquired the landcruiser for free or in a trade, but it was used as a fishing truck so it was very, very rusty. When I showed up he had welded steel panels over the rusty rear 1/2 of the truck and somebody had fit an aluminum (?) bed on the back half (over the rusty/missing rear floor). He also had patched up the floors...pretty sure it was done with rivots and tin by the PO. No, he did not cut out any of the rust before welding new steel quarterpanels. The rear corners would have been difficult to fabricate so we used diamondplate panels.
I ground down the welds and used bondo to clean up the body. We (really, my uncle) fabricated a new drip rail for the rood and we fiberglassed it and used resin to recreate the original size drip rail. I bought a gallon of rustoleum in forest green and we painted the roof white. After a week of blood sweat & tears, I needed to get back to college in northern Vermont. We hadn't even started the landcruiser yet. I did get it registered and insured. Of course, the PO couldn't find the title so I did buy a title from one of those mail-in places in Arizona (sketchy).
The day I was supposed to leave we pulled it down he street to the local mechanic who was a friend of my uncle's to try and get it running. The webber carb was deemed bad, so we made an adapter plate and fit a buick 2-barrel carb and added an in-line fuel filter. The muffler exploded on a backfire so just welded a generic muffler and made a side exhaust. It made it round the block...but didn't stop well at all and pulled to one side. The mechanic slapped a NYS inspection sticker on the windshield and I drove off. I loaded up with extra fluids and headed north to VT, 350 miles & ~7 hours away. As I left my uncle said "if you break down before the Bronx call me, otherwise call your parents."
After the first hour I pulled over due to smoke under the hood. The extra cardboard gasket we had left on the carb manifold was smoking (phew). I cleaned it up best I could and that was all good. The fuel tank was dirty and I probably swapped the fuel filter every hour or so (once the truck started to stumble). I made it to my parent's house at the halfway point for dinner and continued on my way, filling up with gas & a fresh fuel filter just north of Albany (this is important). I planned to take the northern rout to VT, to minimize the time w/high-speed traffic on 2-lane roads (Rt 7A). The truck was happy at 60 mph, and staying on the interstate minimized the risk of actually needing the brakes to avoid a deer on a back road. Unfortunately, there's only one gas station between the Northway & Burlington and since it was Sunday night (it couldn't have been past 9) it was closed. It was winter and it was really cold, but I did have enough clothing to stay in the truck overnight. I decided to roll the dice and see how much closer I could get to Burlington, I had class in the morning. I figured if I could get closer and find a gas station, even if it was closed I could just park there and fill up when they opened in the AM.
I slowed down. I slowed way down to conserve gas and increase the odds of getting to town. I feel like i didn't see another car for most of the trip. It was an adventure and I loved it. I debated pulling over and stopping but pondered on at ~40mph. I didn't even see a gas station open or closed until I rolled into south Burlington on what must have been fumes.
The FJ was my daily transportation for ~2 years. It was awesome....once I fixed the brakes.
Once the weather got warmer I drove to my parents house to replace the brake pads and cylinders. Turns out, only one brake was actually working. The wheel cylinders were leaking so badly somebody actually crimped one of them off entirely. Ouch! I paid a local race shop to patch the worst rust spot in the frame in exchange for a NYS inspection sticker. There was an exhaust leak at the header that I applied JB weld to every few months (fixed is fixed, right?).
When I graduated from college and left NYS I sold it to a neighbor for $800. He had fun with it, replaced all the wheel cylinders (again!) and eventually sold the engine and parted out the rest.
It is crazy to think the truck sat around for +10 years and with lots of help got it started and drove it on a 7 hour road trip. This is long before cell phones or navigation. I had never done anything mechanical other than replace brake pads and change oil prior to this.