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#171
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Black and Orange Painting
Between the last 2 weekends painted some chassis parts along with some engine pieces. Did some rear end factory paint marks.
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The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to OneStopRestoration For This Useful Post: | ||
66BoxNova (09-16-2024), Dave Rifkin (09-19-2024), dykstra (09-16-2024), Hawkeye (09-15-2024), mhurd (09-16-2024), olredalert (10-08-2024), PeteLeathersac (09-18-2024), ragtop (09-16-2024), RPOLS3 (09-19-2024), Tenney (09-16-2024), Zman1969 (09-18-2024) |
#172
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Looking great Rick!!
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Dave Dykstra 1968 Camaro Palomino Ivory/Ivy Gold interior -Delivered to Courtesy Chevrolet, Los Angeles, CA 2013 Corvette Grand Sport 60th Anniversary Edition Arctic White/Diamond Blue interior -Delivered to Bill Jacobs Chevrolet, Joliet, IL NCRS#66003 “One test result is worth one thousand expert opinions”—Werner Von Braun Dykstra Motorsports |
#173
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Rick I agree with Dave - Looking great! - question do you have any preference on the engine orange paint? reason I ask is whatever I used on my 302 I'm not happy with, I Don't remember what I used- Duplicolor? -as it turned almost flat orange after driving it I looked at a thread here and Seymour Hi-Tech EN48 was suggested, and I see several brands up on your shelf
thx Rich
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69 RS/Z 302 VE3 Daytona 69 Chevelle SS 396 375 69 T/A clone LS6/6 speed 90 Formula 350 |
#174
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Engine Paint
Hi Rich,
I have been using the Bill Hirsch stuff for all engine builds i have done. I have used everything from there Hemi orange for some 6 pack engines I built for some other guys as well as the Chevy orange for my cars. This last time i picked it up it seems to have a very long dry time, as in over a week or more. The parts still could not be touched a day after painting In the past it seems like it dired much faster. With Bill Hirsch it also seems that one time you get a quart and it is thin enough to spray and the next time im adding a reducer to because its to thick. The reason i like it is it sprays easy, drys glossy, and after a motor is fired and gets a few heat cycles dulls down just a bit to more of a semi gloss to satin. Very durable and you can touch up, heat cycle an engine and never tell where you touched up. |
#175
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More Body work and my thoughts on NOS sheetmetal
This is just a glimpse into the time commitment required for body work. All panels are stripped and dents worked out, followed by filler to smooth out areas. This gets followed by epoxy primer. Something else that is a pet peeve, NOS sheetmetal is does not mean perfect, and in most cases the parts you get had flaws. This quarter proved to have some serious issues behind the back wheel. Worked out the metal best i could. Also managed to get the tail panel worked, and mudded for a first sand. If your wondering why all mud, its because much like rockers you will never find a straight one. Just the way it is.
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The Following 18 Users Say Thank You to OneStopRestoration For This Useful Post: | ||
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#176
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Great progress on the car. You do quality work
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The Following User Says Thank You to Stihl For This Useful Post: | ||
OneStopRestoration (10-08-2024) |
#177
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Continued Body Work
I do hope you guys are finding this somewhat interesting. I could see how for some, this could get boring fast. Body work is just something I was taught by my dad to not rush and do right. Every car i seem to work on i continue to learn more and get just a bit better.
The rocker in the first picture shows the continue process of blocking, finding low spots and filling. Dad taught me to use minimal filler. We both somewhat cringe when we see car shows and they mud the full panel and block it. The door is back the basic, stripe, hammer dolly and in the case of this door acid off any light rust. Much easier to acid the smaller door than the roof. On this car I finally bought a dent puller. Really helps keep the filler down to as minimal as possible and with some panels you just cant get to the back side. The triangle in the bottom right of the door is just me cutting out some rust and repairing. I believe this is pretty common for 68/69 doors because of how tight the door frame is to the skin. |
The Following 14 Users Say Thank You to OneStopRestoration For This Useful Post: | ||
69M22Z (10-11-2024), big gear head (10-11-2024), chevyman0429 (10-11-2024), Dave Rifkin (10-12-2024), dykstra (10-11-2024), gtomike1967 (10-11-2024), Hawkeye (10-11-2024), L78_Nova (10-11-2024), olredalert (10-11-2024), PeteLeathersac (10-11-2024), ragtop (10-11-2024), RPOLS3 (10-11-2024), scuncio (10-11-2024), Tenney (10-11-2024) |
#178
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Awesome work. My dad also taught me to do body work when I was a kid, but his was more the Earl Scheib mentality.
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to scuncio For This Useful Post: | ||
olredalert (10-11-2024), OneStopRestoration (10-12-2024) |
#179
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Quote:
I really commend you and others that have the patience for this. I for one don’t have the patience or skill and lean into ,pay, folks like you so I don’t lose my mind! Curious, do you listen to music while working? |
#180
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I had to look up Earl Scheib. Dont sell yourself short, for the name and time period the work he did was probably pretty good
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