bkahler Posted Monday at 08:46 PM Report Posted Monday at 08:46 PM (edited) The title says it all, anyone know the answer? From the pictures that I have of my original bed it appears the washers sat on top of the bed surface. Edited Monday at 08:52 PM by bkahler Quote
Los_Control Posted Monday at 08:51 PM Report Posted Monday at 08:51 PM My trailer with original wood has them sitting on top. Quote
bkahler Posted Monday at 09:06 PM Author Report Posted Monday at 09:06 PM 12 minutes ago, Los_Control said: My trailer with original wood has them sitting on top. Your trailer matches with what I believe was the original bed on my truck. Here's the only good picture I have of the bed that shows the washers and the wood. It sure looks like they sat on top of the planks. Quote
Los_Control Posted Monday at 09:11 PM Report Posted Monday at 09:11 PM Here is what I'm looking at 1 Quote
bkahler Posted Monday at 09:13 PM Author Report Posted Monday at 09:13 PM That washer certainly appears to sitting on top of the plank. Thanks! Quote
Los_Control Posted Monday at 09:25 PM Report Posted Monday at 09:25 PM The other corner is missing the bolt and washer .... you can see the wood is flush and the washer was not counter sunk. .... The wood is marked from the washer but same level across. ..... Mine sit on top. 1 Quote
Young Ed Posted Monday at 10:08 PM Report Posted Monday at 10:08 PM And from a manufacturers prospective I doubt they'd go through the labor of countersinking washers for a mostly aesthetic reason Quote
bkahler Posted Monday at 10:10 PM Author Report Posted Monday at 10:10 PM Just now, Young Ed said: And from a manufacturers prospective I doubt they'd go through the labor of countersinking washers for a mostly aesthetic reason That's pretty much what I was thinking as well. Quote
John-T-53 Posted Monday at 10:22 PM Report Posted Monday at 10:22 PM Countersink 'em. Looks / functions better. Quote
Dave72dt Posted Monday at 10:27 PM Report Posted Monday at 10:27 PM (edited) ggdad1951's "building a wood bed" link's first picture shows the washers clearly countersunk in the old wood. Edited Monday at 10:28 PM by Dave72dt Quote
bkahler Posted Monday at 11:40 PM Author Report Posted Monday at 11:40 PM 25 minutes ago, Dave72dt said: ggdad1951's "building a wood bed" link's first picture shows the washers clearly countersunk in the old wood. Yeah, his picture clearly shows countersinking and rabbiting for the shovel strips. I kind of get the impression Dodge built beds both ways. My truck had a piece of plywood on top of the remnants of what I believe was the original wood and there were no rabbits and no countersinking. I kind of like the utilitarian look of no rabbits and no countersinking. Quote
Dave72dt Posted Tuesday at 12:19 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 12:19 AM Washer on top the wood makes me think of scraping snow off a sidewalk or driveway and coming up against a raised edge. I realize that bed will never see a scoop shovel and you may not be able to relate to scraping snow off a driveway but I think it looks more utilitarian with the washers recessed. JMO. You could eliminate those washers and bolt the cross members using the only the bottom holes and short bolts. The bed is still bolted to the cross members on the outside by the side angles. 1 Quote
Jerry Roberts Posted Tuesday at 12:50 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 12:50 AM The replacement boards from Horkey's has the recesses for the washers 1939 - 1947 . Quote
JBNeal Posted Tuesday at 12:56 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 12:56 AM 4 hours ago, bkahler said: The title says it all, anyone know the answer? From the pictures that I have of my original bed it appears the washers sat on top of the bed surface. This corner of the Spring Special bed still has its black paint present, and it appears that the shovel strips are rabbited in and the bed washers are seated in counterbores. I believe both of these details serve a purpose: shovel strips lock into the rabbits to keep the boards from moving laterally, which might expose the gaps between the boards and the bedsides without the counterbore, any compression of the boards by the big washers could cause splintering around the washers, which could snag on burlap or paper feed sacks; the counterbore removes this risk by placing any splintering below the bed boards surface Quote
Los_Control Posted Tuesday at 01:52 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 01:52 AM 43 minutes ago, JBNeal said: This corner of the Spring Special bed still has its black paint present, and it appears that the shovel strips are rabbited in and the bed washers are seated in counterbores. Not saying it is true, not saying it is not true .... As the wood gets older and shrinks and the years go by .... the bolts would become loose. So if a owner crawled under the truck and tightened the bolts up .... they could easily suck the washers into the 1/2 rotted lumber. And appear to be countersunk. To be honest, looking at your photo the washers are actually below the surface of the wood. .... which "could" indicate someone came along and tightened them up. 2 hours ago, bkahler said: Yeah, his picture clearly shows countersinking and rabbiting for the shovel strips. I kind of get the impression Dodge built beds both ways. My truck had a piece of plywood on top of the remnants of what I believe was the original wood and there were no rabbits and no countersinking. I kind of like the utilitarian look of no rabbits and no countersinking. Could go either way .... I can see the aftermarket manufacturers doing it because it looks cool and is clean .... would Dodge do it on the assembly line? Just my opinion they were not countersunk, but later on could have been .... A good place to use your own judgement Quote
Dave72dt Posted Tuesday at 03:41 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 03:41 AM I would expect washers that had been pulled down by tightening to have rounded edges on the wood. All the pictures of the old wood seem to have a machined, sharp edge. The bolts would also have been rusty making successfully tightening them difficult. I believe they were countersunk originally. It doesn't make sense to not countersink them for a bed usability perspective. Quote
ggdad1951 Posted Tuesday at 10:56 AM Report Posted Tuesday at 10:56 AM 9 hours ago, Los_Control said: Not saying it is true, not saying it is not true .... As the wood gets older and shrinks and the years go by .... the bolts would become loose. So if a owner crawled under the truck and tightened the bolts up .... they could easily suck the washers into the 1/2 rotted lumber. And appear to be countersunk. To be honest, looking at your photo the washers are actually below the surface of the wood. .... which "could" indicate someone came along and tightened them up. Could go either way .... I can see the aftermarket manufacturers doing it because it looks cool and is clean .... would Dodge do it on the assembly line? Just my opinion they were not countersunk, but later on could have been .... A good place to use your own judgement My original bed wood is long gone in the fire pit, but I can tell you the countersink was factory and not a repeated tightening of a bolt. Wood in my bed was not by any means all rotten, was actually in decent enough shape, just not resto quality. From a factory setting, the rabbits and a counter sink are not that big of a process to do and litterally the right thing to do for someone that woudl be shoveling. I'd say countersunk factory. 1 Quote
Young Ed Posted Tuesday at 01:43 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 01:43 PM I should have looked first. Grabbed a couple of my bills and while there aren't many pics that show the bed there are a few and they clearly show countersunk washers. Interesting they all also appear to be unfinished or at least not finished black to match. So with the contrast it's easy to see they are sunk in. It appears they are even slightly below the level of the boards. Quote
Los_Control Posted Tuesday at 07:37 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 07:37 PM 8 hours ago, ggdad1951 said: I'd say countersunk factory. And I say NOT!!! 🤣🤣🤣 Seems like some were and some were not. I went out and took a closer look at mine today and no chance they ever were .... no chance the wood is not original either. I imagine some plants did and some did not, maybe depends on where your truck was built? Quote
ggdad1951 Posted Tuesday at 09:37 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 09:37 PM As always....your truck do what you want! Quote
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