I was searching for pictures of FED steering box mounts the other day, and I ran across a picture of the beautiful butterfly steering wheel Tom Hanna made for his "cackle car" a few years back. I was just stunned, and I had to give it a try. I initially was going to use the wheel on the Wyo-digger (http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=811466 ) , but I like it so much I think I'm just gonna keep it and hang it on the shop wall. I started with a piece of 3" DOM axle tube, and a lot of cutting and drilling later, I had the "crown" roughed out. Next, I made a fixture and hot bent the spokes to get the finish width for the wheel. One of my students cut out the grips and welded them on; I smoothed all the welds and he made a plate to attach the wheel to the shaft. It's nowhere near as nice as Hanna's, in fact I doubt I'm qualified to sniff Hanna's farts when it comes to fabrication; but I'm pretty happy with it. Mostly the fact that I could do it at all.
I think we are going to try a "street freak" round wheel in this same style next. Anyone interested in one of these?
Beautiful job on that wheel, are you going to use wood for the grip inserts? As far as Tom Hanna's work, I have seen his car in person and it is, incredible!
If you want something grainy and different try this. Rough out a set of grips out of a soft wood -pine is good-and burn them with a torch and then with a stiff brush scub all the black away. The more you scrub the lighter the color becomes so do samples first It will give you that driftwood appearence and be rough with streaks of dark lines. take the grips to a sander or a peice of sand paper on a flat surface to make the backside flat to fit the wheel surface nice and finnish with a nice clearcoat
That sounds like a cool idea Bruce! I'm definitely going to try that out. BTW, the second wheel is about 1/2 done, and it's going to be a real 60s psychedelic piece... I'm stoked!
Here's the round one, mostly finished. Funny story about this wheel. After I came up with a design, the same student that helped me out with the butterfly wheel built this one pretty much on his own. The kid has a ton of talent, but he is his own worst enemy... He was always getting pissed. thinking his work wasn't good enough or wondering why he couldn't do the same things I was showing him. I was so annoyed at one point, I told him if he ever opens a shop, he should call it "Labor Of Hate Hot Rods". You heard it here first. He'll probably be famous...