Good afternoon Fordman, thanks for replying!
fordman wrote:you got lucky. that was the only nut i had that was that year . the rest i have are 70-77 columns.
Thanks very much for this offer Fordman! Yet thanks to 70_F100's guidance in
1968-70 steering wheel hold-down nut (shorter than 71+ nuts), I've managed to get my hands on two NOS nuts--they fit perfectly!
This Afternoon's Update:
I'm amazed that it's been an entire year since my last post to this thread! Here's today's yard view:
All of these photos may be clicked upon to see much larger editions.
Two 350983-S, 5/8-18 nuts arrived from
Green Sales, and they were absolutely perfect! Thanks again to 70_F100 for coming up with the part number for this early steering wheel nut, and for letting me know about the Green Sales inventory. That was incredibly helpful and got this conversion jump-started again!
The nuts were $2 each, so with shipping it came to $12.
Here's the 350983-S next to the original 1972 nut.
You can see that the 350983-S is significantly shorter than the 1972 nut! It also has regular threads, while the 1972-style is a distorted-thread lock-nut (a "pinch-nut").
I replaced the 1972-style nut with 350983-S, torqued it to 50 ft/lbs, and measured slightly more than 3/16" of now-extraneous steering shaft.
The steering wheel being pulled:
With the 1972-style nut threaded on to expose slightly less than 3/16" of the steering shaft, I covered everything up as much as possible!
Here's a video of the shaft loosing slightly less than 3/16"! My goal was to leave enough shaft in place to allow it to stick out
slightly beyond the torqued 350983-S nut, just to guarantee complete thread engagement.
Video Formats: The WMV video will play nearly anywhere, while the quality H.264 video will only work with fairly up-to-date computers.
High Quality H.264 (22 MB) Medium Quality WMV (11 MB)
After some detailed attention with a flat file, I torqued down the 350983-S nut. Here's what I wound up with--it turned out exactly as I'd hoped!
With the shaft cut down to match the short 350983-S nut, the horn button installed with no trouble at all!
Fordman, thanks again for your reply, and a special thanks to 70_F100 for showing me how to get the NOS 350983-S nuts!
Robroy