Jump to content

All Activity

This stream auto-updates

  1. Past hour
  2. Thank You, Thank You, Thank You, Up against some really awesome cars and to win 3 third. You have made our day!!
  3. Raymond Loewy himself designed the wheel cover.
  4. My Temp and Air knobs on my 72 are in less than stellar condition. The chrome is almost completely gone, and I tried to repaint them with "chrome" spray paint. What a waste of time! Since they are no longer available thru our vendors, has anyone found an alternative that is a similar match to the round originals?
  5. Today
  6. You may be correct with “four”… Myself I figured ‘two’….One stamp for the indented ring around the center, and a second stamping for the five scallops/ flats. I’m not a stamping expert, and am only guessing here!
  7. Just wait until you do the front pipes up to the manifold. It was 102 yesterday and I took the R2 out for a spin and heat wasn't a problem.
  8. Yesterday
  9. Hey Ron, I just did this as well. Started at the mufflers and there was such a drastic difference, I stopped there (for now). Each muffler wrap was $28 (https://amzn.to/3SmgIxp).
  10. Congratulations to Stacy from USA for winning Third Place with his 1991 Avanti Convertible. Award Prize supplied by Jim at Studebaker International !
  11. Congratulations to Harvey Snitzer from Michigan for winning Second Place with his 1971 Avanti II. Award Prize supplied by Jim at Studebaker International !
  12. Congratulations to Leo Belik from Finland for winning First Place with his 1963 Avanti R2. Award Prize supplied by Jim at Studebaker International!
  13. Also posted in trivia section.
  14. Posting this on both Forums. While this deals with acrylic lacquer, I assume it could affect other paints as well.
  15. Years ago I stripped a '63 Avanti with paint remover down to bare fiberglass. I then parked it outside in the rain and hot sun for more than a month. I had already washed the body with a lot of lacquer thinner. As I recall my procedure was based on the advice of experts. I then sprayed the primer and did the bondo work on the seams. A body shop sprayed the urethane. To this day the paint is perfect. It has been garaged, however. Another Avanti locally that was stripped down to bare fiberglass (by someone else) has not fared so well. It has sat in the sun and quite a bit of its paint has bubbled or pealed off.
  16. Perhaps, four, then? The gold in the center was eliminated, the indented black ring around the center was added, the five fake vents (also indented) near the periphery were added, and the indented silver areas (5) were added. BTW, the shape of those indented silver areas is sweet - not just a simple curve. I wonder who designed the wheel covers. Also BTW I prefer the Avanti wheel covers without the silver paint. With the black areas, but no silver.
  17. Hi Kodjo….. I no longer have that letter, however, it’s point was… Water absorbed into the fiberglass from water sanding operations will eventually expand under the new paint when continually subjected to warm temperatures (sun). The factory suggested the repairer do his utmost to make sure the (fiberglass) is completely dry.
  18. I have these blisters and would love to read Studebaker Service letter W-1963-1. Can somebody send me a picture of this letter please? more on my unfortunate paint issues here:
  19. I understand what you mean Dwight. What I’m looking for here are the amount of modifications which needed to be done on the original 1954 (or late ‘53) Stude full wheelcover to produce the 1963 Avanti wheelcover…. Perhaps asking how many stamping operations were required to accomplish this was a step in the wrong direction.
  20. That could be it. We painted the car during the winter. An hour before painting the booth was probably around freezing temp. We did heat the paint booth up to barely 68° Fahrenheit before we started painting. So, the body itself would still be somewhere between freezing and 68° Fahrenheit. Might be to cold and damp might have build up and is still under the paint?
  21. So the light is for the emergency brake and some type of brake malfunction or it could just be a bad connection?
  22. Beautiful car. The interior looks awesome
  23. Thanks for that info.
  24. I'm not quite sure what the question is. I assume that there were no leftover late-53--55 wheel covers to re-stamp. So, a new piece of stainless steel sheet was stamped into a correct Avanti wheel cover with a modified late-53--55 die. I also assume that the three modifications were machined into the new (Avanti) dies. But, it may have taken more than one strike to fully form all the curves in the Avanti wheel cover (just as it may have taken more tan one strike on the late-53--55 wheel cover).
  25. Nah.. I like the Down'y way. Before After..
  26. Yes, a lot of truth in this... I made a ramp outside the garage and would roll the car onto it and bake it in the summer sun. Skin temps would get upwards of 190 farenheit. A wash with lacquer thinner and a bake, repeat, repeat. I can attribute this to the one day I saw the car had a dry spot and it got better from there...
  27. I owned a plastic media blasting company and stripped many (about 9) Corvettes that had been chemicaly stripped and then painted. Over the years I probably stripped 30 vettes, but only some were in for paint failures of some reason. Areas of the raw fiberglass absorbed some amount of the chemical and laid dormant for some time. Then when the car was heated as in sitting out in the sun at a car show bubbles would appear in and under the paint. They looked very much like what these photos are showing. I think somewhere in this cars past a chemical was used and got into the fiberglass. A PPG paint rep once told me that if a chemical process was going to be used on a fiberglas car, once the car was bare, it should be put into the paint booth and baked at the highest temp possible to off gas and bake the fiberglass dry before any sanding or priming should begin.
  28. Last week
  29. Always really liked the turquoise & fawn!
  1. Load more activity
×
×
  • Create New...