Restoring a pile of rust and missing parts to past glory...or "The difficult we do immediately, the impossible takes a little longer."
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Sunday, March 30, 2014
Quiet Day and a Talented Lady
It's a quiet Sunday and I decided to watch the race from Martinsville, so with no car progress to report, I'll just post this YouTube video of a remarkable young Dutch trumpet player for you to enjoy.
Friday, March 28, 2014
Tools!
FedEx and UPS have been busy again, so I now have tools and can get back to my sheet metal work.
After I trim a couple of pieces, I'll take on the first major amputation and repair with new parts and material. First on the list is the tail panel. The '55 part is now cut down to the point where it shares contours with the '56. Fortunately the part from the '56 was in good shape in the salvaged areas, so no problems there.
Weather permitting, I should soon have some new photos to post.
After I trim a couple of pieces, I'll take on the first major amputation and repair with new parts and material. First on the list is the tail panel. The '55 part is now cut down to the point where it shares contours with the '56. Fortunately the part from the '56 was in good shape in the salvaged areas, so no problems there.
Weather permitting, I should soon have some new photos to post.
Muggyweld
While waiting for FedEx to deliver my replacement tools,
I’ve been playing around with one of the yet untried restoration challenges.
I first heard of a product called Muggyweld some years ago.
It’s a low melting-temp soldering/welding system with several advertised uses, but
my interest was specifically to repair pitted pot metal parts.
The shop that re-chromed most of my ’56 parts also does pot
metal repair, but what I had done by them was fairly expensive and the results
were not show quality by any means. When I brought the parts to the shop I stated
I only expected driver quality, so the less than perfect quality wasn’t an issue, but I was curious to
learn for myself just what it takes to repair soft metals in the event I wanted
to try performing the labor intensive part of the job myself.
After watching a YouTube video, I decided to experiment with
Muggyweld, first to see if it’s something an amateur should attempt, and also
to see if I could save a few bucks. My labor is cheap, but the kit is not, as I received an airtight plastic container with half a dozen alloy rods the size
of standard welding rods, and a small bottle of flux that looks and flows like honey. The kit was $59 on Amazon.
I practiced on a couple of seriously pitted windshield wiper
mounts before I attempt repairing the better set, and I’ll show you what I have
accomplished so far.
The part on the left is one of my better parts, and it shows the
typical pitting on sixty year old pot metal that’s been exposed to the
elements most of its life.
The center part has been wire brushed and sanded to remove
the peeling chrome, but I haven’t yet begun to grind out the corrosion. That
operation involves the use of a Dremel tool with a variety of attachments,
mainly tiny burs so the deep pits can be drilled out much like a dentist does
teeth.
One side of the part on the right shows how much material
had to be removed to get to clean base metal. As you can see, the surface is
very rough. The other side has had Muggyweld added to build up the surface to
the original level. I didn’t make an effort to fill in the few remaining voids,
but rather wanted to see the effect of grinding and sanding the soft material
with different types of tools.
Not sure if I can get the parts as defect free as the ones I
had done at the plating shop, but I’ll give it a try.
Thursday, March 20, 2014
High Quality Chinese Tools!
With the weather cooperating again, I thought by this time I'd have photos of new sheet metal tacked into place, but my Chinese tools thought differently.
First to go was the nearly new Ingersol Rand air shear. I bought it just before I began cutting patch panels, so I've not used it much, but the center blade broke off. Since I originally paid twice what the no-name shear cost I expected the quality to be better, but I guess expensive Chinese products are just as crappy as cheap Chinese products.
I located replacement cutting blades on line, but they were only $20 less than a new tool. I suppose I made another bad decision by ordering the new tool, but I'm hoping the first tool failure was a fluke, since user reviews were very good. If the new one goes belly-up I can use the first tool to cannibalize parts...unless the same thing breaks!
Next, I set up the Chinese bead roller to put some rigidity grooves in the trunk floor. The manual says 20 gauge is the heaviest it will form. The manual was right, but I had to try it on the 18 gauge required for the floor. When trying to form 18 gauge, the frame flexes and the die wheels will not track true. The set screws meant to secure the dies also slip if you set the dies too tight, which means you have to roll the panel through, then tighten the setting and roll it back again. It took three passes to form the panel and because of the flex, the repeats drifted off-line. I finally got them done, but pretty doesn't describe the results.
The day wasn't done yet, as I decided to use my Chinese bench grinder to clean up some welds on small panels. Despite being the most powerful and expensive model carried by Northern Tool, it's laughably gutless. I've learned how to baby it and still get some work done, but apparently its days are numbered also. The cast aluminum part-rest broke off at one wheel, so I can only use one side. Today the light switch broke and the plastic shield can no longer be adjusted, and keeps falling out of place. It's over a year old, so perhaps I'm expecting too much.
Not to be outdone by the more expensive tools, my pick hammer lost its head when the wood handle split. Not much of a crisis, but just one more little aggravation.
If I could buy North American made tools, I'd gladly do it, but almost none are made for the home owner and shade tree mechanic. Even professional and commercial grade tools made here are a rarity, and all are prohibitively expensive unless used on your regular job every day.
One piece of sheet metal stock had quite a bit of surface rust, so I used my dad's 1951 vintage Craftsman belt sander to clean it up quickly. That thing had thousands of hours of heavy use on his construction job, yet keeps on doing the job after more than sixty years, with only a couple of small parts replaced. I sure can't say the same for the modern crap.
First to go was the nearly new Ingersol Rand air shear. I bought it just before I began cutting patch panels, so I've not used it much, but the center blade broke off. Since I originally paid twice what the no-name shear cost I expected the quality to be better, but I guess expensive Chinese products are just as crappy as cheap Chinese products.
I located replacement cutting blades on line, but they were only $20 less than a new tool. I suppose I made another bad decision by ordering the new tool, but I'm hoping the first tool failure was a fluke, since user reviews were very good. If the new one goes belly-up I can use the first tool to cannibalize parts...unless the same thing breaks!
Next, I set up the Chinese bead roller to put some rigidity grooves in the trunk floor. The manual says 20 gauge is the heaviest it will form. The manual was right, but I had to try it on the 18 gauge required for the floor. When trying to form 18 gauge, the frame flexes and the die wheels will not track true. The set screws meant to secure the dies also slip if you set the dies too tight, which means you have to roll the panel through, then tighten the setting and roll it back again. It took three passes to form the panel and because of the flex, the repeats drifted off-line. I finally got them done, but pretty doesn't describe the results.
The day wasn't done yet, as I decided to use my Chinese bench grinder to clean up some welds on small panels. Despite being the most powerful and expensive model carried by Northern Tool, it's laughably gutless. I've learned how to baby it and still get some work done, but apparently its days are numbered also. The cast aluminum part-rest broke off at one wheel, so I can only use one side. Today the light switch broke and the plastic shield can no longer be adjusted, and keeps falling out of place. It's over a year old, so perhaps I'm expecting too much.
Not to be outdone by the more expensive tools, my pick hammer lost its head when the wood handle split. Not much of a crisis, but just one more little aggravation.
If I could buy North American made tools, I'd gladly do it, but almost none are made for the home owner and shade tree mechanic. Even professional and commercial grade tools made here are a rarity, and all are prohibitively expensive unless used on your regular job every day.
One piece of sheet metal stock had quite a bit of surface rust, so I used my dad's 1951 vintage Craftsman belt sander to clean it up quickly. That thing had thousands of hours of heavy use on his construction job, yet keeps on doing the job after more than sixty years, with only a couple of small parts replaced. I sure can't say the same for the modern crap.
Monday, March 17, 2014
3/17/14 Update
Almost another week gone with only meager progress to report. My wife’s honey-do list required several days of attention, plus winter made a brief but nasty return, and I didn’t feel like turning the heat on in the garage again.
After the temperature climbed into the fifties today I did make butcher paper patterns for the modified trunk floor, and then cut out replacement panels that will require some forming to make them fit. As I mentioned earlier, I have no intention of making them look stock. I’m only interested in function. The spare tire well will be eliminated and there will be only one main floor level, replacing the staggered-level of the original stamping. Installation will come after I first replace the tail panel.
The slightly raised trunk floor will provide additional clearance for non-stock fuel tank options. The ’55-’56 tanks are not being reproduced, so I’ll be using either a custom fuel cell or adapting a tank from another Mopar. I really don’t want to try and salvage an old '56 tank, plus I intend to eliminate the side filler door to clean things up a bit. Depending on which tank I choose, I’ll try to fit a fill pipe from a later model C-body behind the license plate, or possibly inside the trunk. If I resort to that option, I’ll have to rethink the battery location.
I’ve been researching everything needed to rebuild the front suspension and steering components. The old king pin suspension has a large number of parts to replace and after comparing individual prices from several sources, I think I’ll go with Kanter’s front end kit and their idler arm and center link. They appear to have everything I need, so dealing with one supplier should make it easier and they have a fairly good reputation.
Coil spring prices vary considerably on the sites I’ve visited, but I’ve purchased from ESPO Springs ‘n Things in the past and have been satisfied with both price and quality. They don’t list coil springs for a ’56 Plymouth in their online catalog, but I’ll give them a call first. I’m told they manufacture many parts they don’t bother to list.
If the slowly improving weather holds, I should make better progress this week.
After the temperature climbed into the fifties today I did make butcher paper patterns for the modified trunk floor, and then cut out replacement panels that will require some forming to make them fit. As I mentioned earlier, I have no intention of making them look stock. I’m only interested in function. The spare tire well will be eliminated and there will be only one main floor level, replacing the staggered-level of the original stamping. Installation will come after I first replace the tail panel.
The slightly raised trunk floor will provide additional clearance for non-stock fuel tank options. The ’55-’56 tanks are not being reproduced, so I’ll be using either a custom fuel cell or adapting a tank from another Mopar. I really don’t want to try and salvage an old '56 tank, plus I intend to eliminate the side filler door to clean things up a bit. Depending on which tank I choose, I’ll try to fit a fill pipe from a later model C-body behind the license plate, or possibly inside the trunk. If I resort to that option, I’ll have to rethink the battery location.
I’ve been researching everything needed to rebuild the front suspension and steering components. The old king pin suspension has a large number of parts to replace and after comparing individual prices from several sources, I think I’ll go with Kanter’s front end kit and their idler arm and center link. They appear to have everything I need, so dealing with one supplier should make it easier and they have a fairly good reputation.
Coil spring prices vary considerably on the sites I’ve visited, but I’ve purchased from ESPO Springs ‘n Things in the past and have been satisfied with both price and quality. They don’t list coil springs for a ’56 Plymouth in their online catalog, but I’ll give them a call first. I’m told they manufacture many parts they don’t bother to list.
If the slowly improving weather holds, I should make better progress this week.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
3/12/14 Progress
Not much visible happening with my cars recently, unless washing my Valiant convertible and lowering the top is report worthy. It hit 82F in North Texas yesterday so I cleaned a winter’s worth of dust off and took it for a short cruise around our big city. I was hoping to get it cleaned in time to take it to the muffler shop for a muffler transplant, but I ran out of day and energy about the same time. I will have to get it fixed before car show season arrives, since the droning at cruise speeds is very annoying.
As for the '56, I’ve been fabricating and fitting several sheet metal parts. The curved pieces needed to repair the license plate recess in the replacement tail panel were the most time consuming, eating up the better part of two afternoons to form and fit before I could tack-weld them together, but at least that part is finally done.
Here’s a picture of a few of my hand made parts, plus the rear floor panels I purchased from Black Car. They will have to be modified by fabricating and locating body mount cups, and I'm not looking forward to that job. It would be nice if those cups could be purchased somewhere, as I’m really not satisfied with the ones I’ve made. I’ve talked to my creative son-in-law about machining a die and stamping them in his shop, but he hasn’t made one yet.
The replacement panel is far from perfect, but as you can see in an earlier post, the one on the Belvedere looks like it's made of lace, and the Fury looks even worse.
Next step is to cut off the ends of the ’55 tail panel so I can match fit it to the ’56 version. When that’s accomplished, I can finish welding the entire tail panel together along with the small, fabricated trunk floor pieces that attach to it. Then the remainder of the trunk floor can be welded in place so I can support the body on the rear mounts and begin work on the rear seat floor and rocker panels.
The only new part I received this week is a NOS anti-sway bar that I picked up on e-bay. There were three of them being offered by three different people, but the buy-it-now price on this one was $100 cheaper than the others. It’s in perfect shape, even the fifty-plus year old rubber. I could have replaced the rubber on my old one, but the bar and brackets were too deeply pitted to trust it.
As for the '56, I’ve been fabricating and fitting several sheet metal parts. The curved pieces needed to repair the license plate recess in the replacement tail panel were the most time consuming, eating up the better part of two afternoons to form and fit before I could tack-weld them together, but at least that part is finally done.
Here’s a picture of a few of my hand made parts, plus the rear floor panels I purchased from Black Car. They will have to be modified by fabricating and locating body mount cups, and I'm not looking forward to that job. It would be nice if those cups could be purchased somewhere, as I’m really not satisfied with the ones I’ve made. I’ve talked to my creative son-in-law about machining a die and stamping them in his shop, but he hasn’t made one yet.
The replacement panel is far from perfect, but as you can see in an earlier post, the one on the Belvedere looks like it's made of lace, and the Fury looks even worse.
Next step is to cut off the ends of the ’55 tail panel so I can match fit it to the ’56 version. When that’s accomplished, I can finish welding the entire tail panel together along with the small, fabricated trunk floor pieces that attach to it. Then the remainder of the trunk floor can be welded in place so I can support the body on the rear mounts and begin work on the rear seat floor and rocker panels.
The only new part I received this week is a NOS anti-sway bar that I picked up on e-bay. There were three of them being offered by three different people, but the buy-it-now price on this one was $100 cheaper than the others. It’s in perfect shape, even the fifty-plus year old rubber. I could have replaced the rubber on my old one, but the bar and brackets were too deeply pitted to trust it.
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Fill-in Jobs
While waiting for parts to arrive, there is no shortage of labor-intensive restoration tasks to keep me busy. The stainless steel door frame trim will keep me going for some time.
I picked the worst ones to work first and here is the result of somewhere around eight hours of grinding and sanding. It's too bad the rusting was so severe as it will be impossible to remove some of the deeper pits. They will have to be good enough for driver quality, since replacements in good condition are very expensive. I recently saw a single NOS piece with a buy-it-now price of over $900 on ebay. If I'm not happy with my polishing results, I'll have the Belvedere versions chrome plated.
To get them this far I first hand sanded with 80 grit paper, then I used a orbital grinder with a 120 grit wheel to dig a little deeper. From that point, progressed to 180, 220,320 and 400 grit hand sanding. That's as far as I'm going at this point as they will be put aside for months. I'll finish them with 600, 1000, and then 1200 before I buff them with two grades of buffing compound and follow up with a coat of Mother's metal polish.
I picked the worst ones to work first and here is the result of somewhere around eight hours of grinding and sanding. It's too bad the rusting was so severe as it will be impossible to remove some of the deeper pits. They will have to be good enough for driver quality, since replacements in good condition are very expensive. I recently saw a single NOS piece with a buy-it-now price of over $900 on ebay. If I'm not happy with my polishing results, I'll have the Belvedere versions chrome plated.
To get them this far I first hand sanded with 80 grit paper, then I used a orbital grinder with a 120 grit wheel to dig a little deeper. From that point, progressed to 180, 220,320 and 400 grit hand sanding. That's as far as I'm going at this point as they will be put aside for months. I'll finish them with 600, 1000, and then 1200 before I buff them with two grades of buffing compound and follow up with a coat of Mother's metal polish.
Rear Floor and Tail Panels
More sheet metal parts have arrived so I can get back to making from scratch the patch panels that are no longer available. The two rear floor panels from Black Car arrived Saturday, and while they look nice and the basic shape is correct, none of the body mount cups are located and stamped. As with the front floor panels, I will have to make my own. At least Black Car beat their delivery date by two weeks.
Black Car also sent the 4-door rear wheel well/rocker panel patch that I will have to modify by cutting off the portion that fits inside the door opening. The little formed piece is large enough to cover most of the rust through at the wheel well and I can use flat stock for the rest.
The tail panel and trunk floor arrived from Big-M, but unfortunately I can’t use the trunk floor as it is nearly as bad as the one I’m removing. The replacement tail panel has some rust through on the lower side in the license plate recess, but it’s far more solid than the one on the car. But, to add to the difficulty, since it’s from a ’55 both the ends will have to be cut off and joined to the old part where the shapes match.
This would certainly be easier if I owned a ’57 Chevy, but if all new parts could be ordered from a catalog, the job wouldn’t be half as satisfying. You can rebuild most any Chevy with little more a checkbook, but rebuilding a Mopar older than ’63 is a creative challenge as well.
I had intended to take some more pictures but that will have to wait a few days. Yesterday I was sweating in 78F sunshine with the workshop doors open, but right now it’s snowing and sleeting with a strong north wind and the thermometer has been dropping steadily. It now reads 19F and is supposed to hit 14 before morning, but at least the low temp prevents the freezing rain they had predicted.
Black Car also sent the 4-door rear wheel well/rocker panel patch that I will have to modify by cutting off the portion that fits inside the door opening. The little formed piece is large enough to cover most of the rust through at the wheel well and I can use flat stock for the rest.
The tail panel and trunk floor arrived from Big-M, but unfortunately I can’t use the trunk floor as it is nearly as bad as the one I’m removing. The replacement tail panel has some rust through on the lower side in the license plate recess, but it’s far more solid than the one on the car. But, to add to the difficulty, since it’s from a ’55 both the ends will have to be cut off and joined to the old part where the shapes match.
This would certainly be easier if I owned a ’57 Chevy, but if all new parts could be ordered from a catalog, the job wouldn’t be half as satisfying. You can rebuild most any Chevy with little more a checkbook, but rebuilding a Mopar older than ’63 is a creative challenge as well.
I had intended to take some more pictures but that will have to wait a few days. Yesterday I was sweating in 78F sunshine with the workshop doors open, but right now it’s snowing and sleeting with a strong north wind and the thermometer has been dropping steadily. It now reads 19F and is supposed to hit 14 before morning, but at least the low temp prevents the freezing rain they had predicted.
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