
Before
In the dirt, form follows function. Brian Binkert of Bink Designs purchased this 2005 F-150 Supercrew brand new, planning to use it as a daily driver. Desert duty wasn’t the truck’s primary role back then, so Brian installed a lowering kit along with a set of 22-inch Foose wheels. It was perfect for the pavement.
A pavement truck that stays on the pavement never has an identity crisis and rarely gets damaged. The trouble is that Brian’s business, Bink Designs, takes him to off-road events including desert races, short-course races, and informal gatherings in the dirt. As a slammed street cruiser, Bink’s F-1 was getting stuck or getting parked whenever dirt was involved. Something had to be done.
Even though his truck needed a re-do for the dirt, Brian had a working, driving vehicle: reliable transportation. Planning down time is tough, so it was somewhat serendipitous when he lost control in the rain and slammed the front into a brick wall. Down time—and a rebuild—had come a-knockin’!
The brick wall had hit the Supercrew hard, destroying the front clip and tweaking the front of the frame. A visit to a frame shop smoothed out the structural wrinkles, but the ’05 front clip needed to be completely replaced. Since the truck was being rebuilt as a desert truck, replacing the stock sheet metal didn’t make sense. A Fiberwerx 2009-and-newer conversion clip, with its wider coverage and larger fender openings, was a natural choice. This was a perfect time to re-skin the bed to match the front. To that end, a pair of Fiberwerx flared bedsides was installed. The rest of the stock bed was retained, right down to the functional tailgate.
In place of the lowering kit, you’ll find a Brenthel Industries long-travel kit up front these days, damped by Fox coilover and bypass shocks. Out back, the F-1 has been returned to stock, but plans are in the works for long-travel Deaver leaf springs and another pair of Fox shocks.
For the finishing touch, Brian went with a color scheme that sets the truck apart yet remains on the subtle side. This is no rolling billboard, and that’s a good thing.
Down time is hard to plan around, especially if your off-road truck is also your daily driver. We don’t recommend the “brick wall” approach to rebuild scheduling, but Bink’s F-1 shows what can happen when opportunity comes knocking, and knocks hard. Once slammed for the street, it’s now dialed for the dirt.
Specs
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| Vehicle: | 2005 Ford F-150 Supercrew 2WD
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| Owner/Hometown: | Brian Binkert/El Cajon, California
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| Engine: | Ford 5.4L Triton V-8 with K&N intake, Bully Dog programmer, Magnaflow exhaust
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| Transmission: | Stock automatic
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| Front End: | Brenthel Industries Baja Kit long-travel system. Five inches wider per side, fully fabricated upper control arms, lower control arms, and steering knuckles. Fox coilover and bypass shocks. Wheel travel: 18 inches
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| Rear End: | Stock Ford 9.75, stock leaf springs, stock shocks. Big changes coming.
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| Ring and Pinion Ratio: | 4.56:1
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| Tires: | 37x12.50R17 General Grabber
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| Wheels: | 17-inch Method Race Wheels with simulated beadlocks
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| Interior: | Stock seats, Alpine audio head unit, Kicker subwoofer and amplifier
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A Baja Designs Stealth XPG light bar peeks through the front grille slots. It puts out eno
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A Baja Designs Stealth XPG light bar peeks through the front grille slots. It puts out eno
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Rolling stock is a popular and proven combo: 37-inch General Grabber tires wrapped around
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The front and rear bumpers were built by FX Fabrication. They’re low profile, stylish, and
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Brenthel Industries is a small company that’s big on quality and performance.
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The Brenthel long-travel kit on the Bink F-1 bolts to the stock upper and lower control ar
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An alignment conversion is incorporated which fixes the lower control arms in place and us
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The steering knuckles (also called “uprights”) are completely fabricated, but mesh seamles
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The rearend is Ford’s stout 9.75 semi-floater, and has been fitted with 4.56 gears to bett
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If you’d rather retain your stock ’04-to-’08 F-150’s look, Fiberwerx makes a one-piece cli
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A Triton 5.4L three-valve V-8 propels the Bink F-1 and puts out better horsepower, torque,