I was going to take a couple week break on the car after Autorama, but the weather it starting to look better so I decided to get back on it. I dropped off the windshield frame at a local gl*** place to get the windshield cut and glued in. Long story short, it looked terrible. The chalked a huge bead around the frame, which definitely was not going to p***. The pulled the bead off, and gave me the windshield frame back with the gl*** loose. I made some small rubber blocks to go inside the frame to keep the gl*** from rattling, then ran some black silicone in the channel before putting the gl*** and frame together. I then chalked a real tight bead to the frame that's just large enough to fill any gap from the frame to the gl***. Besides that, I put the headlights together and installed them, then made sure the turn signals/brake lights all function correctly. The wheels came off this past weekend also, and got balanced. Now it's just a waiting game until the warmer weather comes this way......
That is one fine looking mocheen Usually I lurk on this thread but it looks so good I just had to say something.BD
every thing looks fantastic on this car...EXCEPT, the windscreen frame .I think its way too wide and heavy looking for a 4" chop. (or is it 4 1/2"??) It looks like the frame is about one inch wide? It should be about 3/4". Just looks clunky to me.You obviously have an eye for details..what do you think?
C.T. On the speedy tonneau, did you drill mounts on the body for the snaps, or make something else to mount it to? thx dave
I think the photo may be making it look wider than it is.....go throw a tape on your frame because it's probably the same repop'd frame as mine...I just cut it down a little more. I doubt that frame should be 3/4" wide anyway...seems too narrow but I'll measure an original if you still think your's and mine are too clunky. Dave - I mainly made the tonneau to hide the non finished interior for Autorama, so I didn't drill the body for snaps. I picked up some high-powered small magnets that had a countersunk hole in them. Each magnet had a holding force of 6 lb. I just ***embled the snap cover to the magnet, and sewed in a soft liner so it didn't directly touch the paint. I did drive the car (in that photo before), around 45 mph with no issue at all.
One of the best builds in recent years in my opinion. Your car will be a collector's item in 10 years or sooner. Nice job! Lynn
I like the tonneau magnet solution! I should do that to mine across the doors.thay flap a bit. My windscreen frame is at 3/4" wide, which is why I noticed how thick yours looks.. It could just be that Im used to looking at mine and mine is too thin!
I was thinking the same as Lowsquire, but having looked at it again, it's mostly to do with the chop, it's a big drop and it makes the frame stand out. Even the stanchions look heavy-handed, it's all down to it being so short. Having said that, I would either get a taller one or a thinner frame, it does look a touch too heavy. But it's just a tiny niggle on a masterpiece. I still would have the twolites, though... don't know why, but I've never really warmed to those weird thingys with the crest on top. But with all that black it gives the car a really sinister look that's cool in itself. Anyway, please excuse me right now as I have a few pictures to print and post on the board in the garage next to the pics of Lowsquire's roadster... must get my muses lined up before I start on mine! Cheers, Eddie
Get some neodymium magnets from ebay or whatever, you can s***ch them into the tonneau so they won't mark the paint. They're the strongest sort available. I'm sure even the smaller ones will be up to the job, I bought a few for some scientific experiments and they're less than 10 mm diameter and about 4 mm tall, yet they're really strong, will hold about 3 kg each! Just one note: keep mobile, wallet and other such stuff well away from them, because those ******s will mess anything even remotely sensitive up in no time... Cheers, Eddie
One year ago today you started this little thread. I cannot believe that it took me this whole year to find it. I cannot think of anything to say that has not already been said...Awesome Job!
I think the windshield looks fine, personally. Deuces are meaty, they're not spindly like T's or sprightly like A's, the windshield works with that. -Dave
Continued with shaking the car down today. It was in the 60s and sunny all day long, so we logged probably 30-40 miles. The car is settling out nice, but the rear may be dropping more than I expected. I'll see how much more it settles with some more driving, but I may try to raise the rear maybe an inch.
Larry - I actually had the rear spring re-arched 1 1/2" more before it was painted. I liked how it looked at mock up, but I knew it didn't have all of the weight in it either. I'm going to put a few more miles on it before I pull anything apart.
I think with your eye for design you should do a three window next. The roadster has set the bar very high as 3W Larry's 3 window did a few years ago. The all black really stands out in my mind. Lynn
Cory You have done a amazing job this car gets me excited every time i look at it. Absolutely beautiful!! I want to build one now larry your car does the same thing and is making me want to build a 3w now.
I like the way it sits. It reminds me of the way **** Scritchfield had the McGee roadster set up. Very nice and refreshingly different than that rubber rake nosedown stance.
ride height looks perfect where its at!! leave it if theres no clearance /rubbing problems.. its so hard to make a 32 stand out because so many have been done so many ways,multiple times.. but your combo is wonderful and the stance it has now sets it apart..not that my opinion means much,but i love it..
I agree, as long as there are no body/tire clearance problems or bottoming problems, the ride height is perfect as long as it doesn't settle any more. You have built a 32 roadster that future ones will be compared to, congratulations.