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Done a bit of dismantling in preparation for paint stripping, cleaning, etc ... one of the wires may have fallen off the motor, and it sounded wobbly and rough as badword to start with ... but it's probably the best of the 3 correct black plastic endbell mabuchi's that I've got
Front tyres are useable, rears are unevenly worn & one is going to split on the sidewall if I try to use it ... I have a set of part worn "vintage" tyres & refurbished wheels though, so I might as well use those - the fronts don't have any of the lettering left, the ones that came on the car have only a hint left - but it's enough to try ... the re-re rears won't get a look in The car came without a bumper, but I do have a bent, worn & stress discolored grey/brown one - but given this is a 8/9ths mk.1 car, it probably should have a black one ... TBH the money's run out, so buying a correct vintage one is not an option, assuming this one straightens out & responds well to boiling (really - I think it was Lars that recommend that, & it does help) - I have a choice - vintage but wrong colour, or re-re but right colour ... Otherwise, nothing to report, I had to resort to using allen keys the long way round on a few of the fasteners - and they finally let go with an audible crack - but no nasty surprises |
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Last edit: by Jonny Retro.
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Jonny,
Keep going there mate, it will be worth it in the end, use what you have for know untill some funds are available again and then replace piece by piece, i am doing the same with my Mk.1 SS. Looking good so far and the body is looking good after the paints been stripped. Signed up for the progress on this one, GING |
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Have boiled up the bumper ... the colour is vastly improved, but there's still a lot of UV yellowing ... the stress marks have gone, but a lot of cracks have appeared ... overall I'm not sure I'm any further forward
These "grey" bumpers used to be really cheap (before the re-releases), as it was the black bumpers that were rare ... now the black ones are cheap ( |
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Hey JR what product do you use to safely strip the old paint? Have you ever used Dot 4 brake fluid?
My Projects:
Bullhead Rebuild ... Ford F350 Mods ... Manta Ray Revival ... Custom Super Hornet Build ... TL-01 Crawler ... CC-01 Pick-up ... CR-01 With Hop ups ... Project Unknown ... Clod crew cab ... Other: Custom Display cases ... Limited Slip Diff(LSD) ... |
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It's De-Solv-It Grafitti Remover - brake fluid is very slow in comparision |
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Last edit: by Jonny Retro.
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Jonny,
That stuff is great, my SS body is back to original colour thanks to De-Solv-It. Your wheel hubs have come up a treat i will after seeing yours do mine. Keep up the great work GING |
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Everything went in the sink for a scrub yesterday, today I've been giving the pot metal bits a going over with a wire brush is a Dremel; these are some "before" & "after" shots ...
It does take the corrosion off, but does make the colour darker ... I tried polishing one bit & it does bring the colour back a little, but it took 1/2 an hour, used up two polishing heads, & nearly burned out my cheapo dremel clone ... it's probably worth doing, but I need to find another way of doing it ... |
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