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what happened to all the old MOLDS and STAMPINGS

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Germ, Jan 10, 2004.

  1. burndup
    Joined: Mar 11, 2002
    Posts: 1,938

    burndup
    Member
    from Norco, CA

    Now, its more about machining than it is stamping and casting, but I just got this book:

    http://www.lindsaybks.com/bks7/auto13/index.html

    Only gotten a few pages into it, but its freakin awesome... lots of pictures. Its hard for me to imagine that manufacturing had already become "so refined" by around 1914.

    To me it puts the industrial revolution in a much more massive perspective, and even so much more so the WWII industrial buildup, which claimed almost all the cool toys...
     
  2. D Picasso
    Joined: Mar 6, 2001
    Posts: 736

    D Picasso
    Member

    all molds and stampings made in the 20th century are piled behind Disastron's trailer.
     
  3. Kartsa
    Joined: Jun 23, 2001
    Posts: 256

    Kartsa
    Member
    from FINLAND

  4. Id always heard that the sheetmetal dies for the 55-57 chevys were sold to South american companies and used to make ---TAXIS-----!!!!!any truth to this?
     
  5. fuel pump
    Joined: Nov 4, 2001
    Posts: 3,620

    fuel pump
    Member Emeritus
    from Caro,MI


    I can tell you for a fact what happened to the dies and tooling (at least one set of it) for the 97 carbs. In the late 60s it was used to build OE service carbs at the Bendix plant in Elmira NY. I was working there at the time they decided to scrap it all. They cut it up so it couldn't be used again. The plant manager who decided to clean house and make room for new tooling couldn't have cared less about a few crazy hot rodders that wanted that old stuff. I wouldn't be surprised that this happened to a lot of that old "junk".
     
  6. 19Fordy
    Joined: May 17, 2003
    Posts: 8,348

    19Fordy
    Member

    I heard the same story about the Russian's got them. [​IMG]
     
  7. ray
    Joined: Jun 25, 2001
    Posts: 3,798

    ray
    Member
    from colorado

    don't forget that these DIES(not many OLD cars used MOLDS [​IMG]) just plain wore out by the time they were done. why do you think the parts didn't fit for shit when NEW? late production run stuff is typically gonna have terricle tolerances. think of old injection molded model kits, gobs of flash etc. now think of the steel dies being squashed in a huge press, wasn't much use to keep worn out dies, even if someone were so inclined.

    and typically in sand casting, the patterns were simply made of wood, yep a few survive, but not many. your best bet is an example like edelbrock, who had their own foundry, now the speed parts that were cast by an outside foundry, good luck! they probably got shit canned fairly quick.
     
  8. cabriolethiboy
    Joined: Jun 16, 2002
    Posts: 892

    cabriolethiboy
    Member

    I used to work for Guide Lamp about 25 years ago. Yes, the one that used to make the headlights. At the time it was a division of General Motors. Our molds and dies had runs of millions of parts, so after the run they are pretty much worn out. What is not worn out are modified to run in smaller machines with shorter runs to be used for service or modified for the next model year. After the service runs are done then it(mold or die) is put on the shelf for a while, then there is usually a clean-up campain and they are scrapped. When they are scrapped they are supposed to be destroyed. I saw a mold that I built one time at a scrap yard, it had weld from a stick welder over the polished surface of the mold. It could have been fixed, but with a lot of work. Besides that some of our molds were approx. 24"x36"x60". Some even bigger than that. Can you guess what that chunk of steel would cost even at scrap price. And what would you haul it in if you bought it? Also you would have to have some pretty big equipment to run them on too. It would be hard to speculate on something that is only 8-10 years old. Still, some seem to survive.
     
  9. Mutt
    Joined: Feb 6, 2003
    Posts: 3,218

    Mutt
    Member

    As late as the 70's, few would have predicted that hot rodding would be where it is now. Most of the stuff that was kept, was kept as neat stuff to have, not for later use. There's probably a lot of stuff sitting in barns, garages, and basements still waiting to be discovered. Problem is getting legal right to reproduce it.
    The holders of patents and copywrites know what can be made from it.
     
  10. I know where all the dies are for the 1932 Ford Roadster bodys. But there not old [​IMG]
     
  11. chromedRAT
    Joined: Mar 5, 2002
    Posts: 1,737

    chromedRAT
    Member

    not die related, but i know a guy around here that has all things studebaker. has an unfinished, rough casting of an aluminum piston and some of the sand left over from the casting bins from 64. stuff's still in the building, or was when he was there a couple of years ago. just kinda neat.
     
  12. ray
    Joined: Jun 25, 2001
    Posts: 3,798

    ray
    Member
    from colorado

    man love em or hate em, there is qwite a story behind them studebakers.

    i don't know about now, but i know about ten years ago many of the 50's-60's stude prototypes and styling exercises were still rotting away in the woods of south bend. and warehouses with nos parts just sitting around. its amazing how the factory was left for decades.
     
  13. Petejoe
    Joined: Nov 27, 2002
    Posts: 12,569

    Petejoe
    Member
    from Zoar, Ohio

    I had read that Delorean dumped all his tooling for the stainless bodies in the Pacific ocean after encountering his problems.
     
  14. av8
    Joined: Mar 3, 2001
    Posts: 1,716

    av8
    Member

    This is typical of sheet metal stamping tooling used by Ford et al in the wayback. This is a '31 Model A front fender die in a 400-ton press, the largest Ford used at the time. This was at Ford's Long Beach, California, plant. BTW, those massive webs are part of the die, not the press!
     
  15. burndup
    Joined: Mar 11, 2002
    Posts: 1,938

    burndup
    Member
    from Norco, CA

    You know, you guys missed out. Ya couldh had the sweet stamping setup... About 2 yrs ago here in Burbank, they tore down the last Lockheed building, on the edge of the airport, where they did p-38's and stuff during the war. There was this MASSIVE stamping press that they had to tear the building down around first, then try and figure out how to get rid of it. Thing was three stories tall. They said anyone who wants it can come and get it! [​IMG] Obviously no one did. So next, it looked like they were digging a big hole next to it, perhaps to tip it over into the hole and bury it. Rumor was then that the thing protruded underground another TWO stories. SO, they filled the hole back in, got more dirt, and piled it up against the side, so when the crew of guys with plasma cutters came, what fell off wouldn't fall so far. Took em quite some time to cut it up, and they still neded massive equipment to haul away the "little" chunks.

    Now the place is a parking lot, with a premium "covered parking" section. Interesting how priorities change in 60 years, from making tactical aircraft to making little overhangs so SUV's don't get dirty so fast.
    -J
     
  16. quickrod
    Joined: Nov 5, 2003
    Posts: 394

    quickrod
    Member

    just wanted to say,this post rules! hope more people can add more stories,i knew germ was smarter than he leads us to believe [​IMG]
     
  17. CrazyDaddy
    Joined: Mar 30, 2002
    Posts: 670

    CrazyDaddy
    Member
    from Austin TX

    Ford sold the '34 3-window dyes to Hupmobile, who used them for a couple of years before they went under. Most dies used for stamping sheet metal can only last so long before the stress takes it's toll. I'd be surprised, if any of the old Ford dies were found, that they were still usable. Still cool to find, tho.
    Elmo, yes there is some 'junk' in your yard...
     
  18. BigJim394
    Joined: Jan 21, 2002
    Posts: 767

    BigJim394
    Member

    Over the years there have been a couple of stories in the rod mags about how one of the big manifold makers back in the 50's and 60's (can't remember if it was Offy, Weiand, or Edelbrock) had a lot of the wooden patterns for their old, no longer in demand, manifolds in a warehouse, and that some of the employees used to throw some of them in the back of their truck when they were going to the dry lakes races. They used to burn them in campfires at night to keep warm. They had no idea that those "obsolete" patterns / forms would ever be needed again.
     
  19. Flipper
    Joined: May 10, 2003
    Posts: 3,439

    Flipper
    Member
    from Kentucky

    I work for a stamping house also. Once a program ends amd "service requirements" are met, the tools get trashed.

    Some get modified and turned into something else....especially structural components.

    Also, some less than perfect parts end up being sold as service parts. Paying high dollar for NOS repair parts may not be the smartest thing to do.
     
  20. shoebox72
    Joined: Jan 24, 2003
    Posts: 1,489

    shoebox72
    Member

    [ QUOTE ]
    Ford sold the '34 3-window dyes to Hupmobile, who used them for a couple of years before they went under.

    [/ QUOTE ]

    CORD, not Ford, Sold their dies to Hupmobile.

    Billy
     
  21. mr57
    Joined: Jun 3, 2002
    Posts: 2,212

    mr57
    Member

    Shoebox and crazydaddy are both right. I've seen a three window Hupp that was indistinguishable body-wise from a Ford. Frame and fenders were completely different. And 40-1 Hupp Skylarks used the Cord Beverley tooling.
     
  22. enjenjo
    Joined: Mar 2, 2001
    Posts: 2,778

    enjenjo
    Member
    from swanton oh

    [ QUOTE ]
    [ QUOTE ]
    Ford sold the '34 3-window dyes to Hupmobile, who used them for a couple of years before they went under.

    [/ QUOTE ]

    CORD, not Ford, Sold their dies to Hupmobile.

    Billy

    [/ QUOTE ]

    Ford didn't own the dies for the 3 window, Budd did. When the model changed in 35, Budd sold the same body with minor modifications to Hupp.

    Cord didn't own the dies for the cord either, Budd again. the Cord body eventually became the Graham, and later the Hupp.

    Believe it or not, the original concept for the production Mustang was a modified 57 T Bird body, on a Falcon chassis floor pan. One was built by Budd, who owned the dies for the T Bird too.

    Most dies are sold for scrap after a few years, and being made unusable. The scrap buyers don't just melt it down though, they have testing done to determine the exact alloy, cut them into smaller pieces, and resell them as die steel.So most large dies cease to exist shortly after being sold.
     
  23. shoebox72
    Joined: Jan 24, 2003
    Posts: 1,489

    shoebox72
    Member

    Thanks for clearing that up. Ya learn somethin' new everyday.

    Billy
     
  24. Great post Germ!!!!
    Clark
     
  25. Elmo Rodge
    Joined: May 12, 2002
    Posts: 2,671

    Elmo Rodge
    Member

    Enjejo, this actually transpired in 1934. Take a look at a Model W417 ('34)Hupp Three Window. (They're everywhere, right?) I haven't seen a W517 (1935) but imagine it's the same. Interesting car. On the subject of foundry patterns, it is amazing how foundries treat patterns that are still in use. It's a wonder anything exists. Wayno
    P.S; Tom, I didn't mean your junk. I meant other junk. [​IMG]
     
  26. Kevin Lee
    Joined: Nov 12, 2001
    Posts: 7,669

    Kevin Lee
    Super Moderator
    Staff Member

    When I was looking at wierd OHV and OHC stuff for flatheads I happened to see quite a few patterns for speed equipment hanging on Speedy Bill's wall.

    Wonder how hard it would be to cast heads for a flatty? They don't look that complex compared to an intake. Something like a ROOF head could be dead simple cast in two pieces and bolted together.
     
  27. Kilroy
    Joined: Aug 2, 2001
    Posts: 3,232

    Kilroy
    Member
    from Orange, Ca

    Elmo might even show you this but the old Evans wood moulds still exist but were left out in the rain and are warped cracked and otherwise ruined.

    Weiand's daughter still had all the old flatty moulds in the back of the building before she sold out. A friend of mine tried to buy them but no salt. She wasn't letting them go.

    Offenhauser still has all the moulds for their old stuff (overhead, adapters, etc). At least thats what Tay told me. He pretty much has no intrest in reviving stuff though. He said if he got enough orders for a givin part he might turn out a few.
     
  28. cabriolethiboy
    Joined: Jun 16, 2002
    Posts: 892

    cabriolethiboy
    Member

    Funny you should mention Roof. I am from Anderson, Indiana where Roof was from. A good friend and hot rodder buddy was a distant relative to Robert Roof and his uncle had all of the patterns and blueprints for the Roof stuff after Roof died. His uncle eventually sold them to Bill Smith. But that was before I knew him. Probably in the 60's. He said his uncle moved a couple of times and he carried that stuff from house to house. He said there were quite a few bare unmachined castings that Smith got too. I have been trying to find some Roof V8 heads and intake for quite a while, but he didn't make much V8 stuff. You would think there would be some of that stuff in this town, but I haven't run in to any yet. I've searched the library for information on Roof, but I guess it wasn't important enough to record anything. There was a guy here in town that has a model T Roof engine in a speedster. He died within the last year and his wife still has it.
     
  29. stan292
    Joined: Dec 6, 2002
    Posts: 858

    stan292
    Member

    I worked for a retail subsidiary of Mickey Thompson Enterprises (a place called American Speed & Custom) in Garden Grove, CA back in 1969. We only used a small portion of the building (the former Garden Grove Post Office) for the retail operation and the back part was chock full of miscellaneous M/T goodies, including many, many wooden "bucks" (sand-cast forms) for various M/T parts. Lots of intake manifolds, etc.

    The stuff was still there when I left, and I bet it just got shitcanned whenever they vacated that building. I'm sure I could have taken whatever I wanted, but was too stupid to think ahead. I did get a couple handfulls of misc. throttle linkage and small hardware items, but that's all.

    Speaking of related "urban legends", the story back then was that Mickey had some warehouses (in Long Beach, as I recall) where he supposedly stored virtually every piece of equipment he ever owned - including dozens of complete cars and motors. I was told he had indy cars, dragsters, funny cars, bonneville stuff, etc. stacked to the ceiling like chordwood. Also, crate upon crate of DOHC (Indy motors) and SOHC 427 Ford motors.

    It seems like that stuff would have surfaced by now - especially after Mickey was murdered, but who can say?
     
  30. jmuk
    Joined: Sep 1, 2001
    Posts: 11

    jmuk
    Member
    from England.

    Craig Conley at Paradise Wheels in California owns most of the Paxton/McCulloch moulds.
     

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