Meanderer
Senior Member
As an auto shop worker, Rick Sullivan has had to repair cars that have been flipped over. Now, he has modified a truck so that it looks upside-down.Sullivan spent six months and $6,000 building the upside-down truck from the parts of two separate vehicles: a 1991 Ford Ranger pickup truck and a 1995 F-150 pickup truck body placed over the top complete with spinning wheels.
Sullivan got the idea for a topsy-turvy truck when he was called to transport an overturned Ford Ranger to his body shop. "I built the truck by starting out collecting parts for a Ford F150, we bought different parts in different locations," he told Barcroft TV. "There's no blueprint. I just started buying parts and then putting it together. It's all in my head and we had to make adjustments throughout, but it turned out pretty much like I envisioned it."
As you might expect, Sullivan gets a lot of attention when he drives the upside-down auto around his home town of Clinton, Illinois.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/...ide-down_n_6121700.html?utm_hp_ref=weird-news (SEE VIDEO)
Sullivan got the idea for a topsy-turvy truck when he was called to transport an overturned Ford Ranger to his body shop. "I built the truck by starting out collecting parts for a Ford F150, we bought different parts in different locations," he told Barcroft TV. "There's no blueprint. I just started buying parts and then putting it together. It's all in my head and we had to make adjustments throughout, but it turned out pretty much like I envisioned it."
As you might expect, Sullivan gets a lot of attention when he drives the upside-down auto around his home town of Clinton, Illinois.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/...ide-down_n_6121700.html?utm_hp_ref=weird-news (SEE VIDEO)