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Rebirth of my steering wheel
Fist off, moderators please feel free to move this to wherever it belongs if need be. The thread in FAQ truck tech by ESLL (RIP) is great and thanks to him I had the motivation to try this. I also used my crappy old wheel as practice for a '63 Nova SS wheel that I'm restoring for my dear ole Dad.
I have always been conflicted about re-pop steering wheels, they are very nice but there is something about taking old parts and making them look new that gets me going. Especially something like a steering wheel that has so served such an important function! :blah: :blah: :blah: Well my original wheel had seen waaay better days, it was cracked all over. The first step was a good cleaning. I used a dremel tool and small triangle file to open up all of the cracks down to the metal. I definitely would not make them so big next time but this was easier and I wanted to be sure that the new material would not crack. This is what it looked like when I was done filing/grinding: http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3482/...25d3bba85c.jpg http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3536/...756c0e4c22.jpg http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3625/...c64124f27b.jpg I decided that PC7 epoxy was going to be the best and cheapest material to rebuild the cracks. The downside is that I couldn't locate it at any hardware stores and had to order from Home Depot online. It was less than $20 after shipping. Turned out to be great stuff, easy to apply and the perfect density/workability for a steering wheel. I really gobbed it on as you can see because I wanted to be sure there were no low spots: http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3551/...01775794a5.jpg [IMG]http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3607/3463635637_8de5ac4e3b.jpg[/IMG http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3518/...152baec7e3.jpg After curing for a few days, I took a half-round file to it and was able to do 95% of the shaping. The Dremel came in handy in a couple of tight spots too. I followed this up with some 80 grit sanding, then 120 on the whole wheel. I had to do another light application of the PC7 to fill in pinholes and a couple of low spots. After more sanding this is how it looked: http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3482/...c63b339d93.jpg Continued... |
Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Shot some 2K primer/surfacer:
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3615/...df2d0aa5c6.jpg Shot some inexpensive acrylic urethane in 510 medium blue with lots of hardener. To get the bowtie out of the horn button I drilled a very small hole in the back and pushed it out. http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3484/...3274264c3a.jpg http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3485/...dba6a34bd1.jpg Here is the finished product back in the truck, these pictures don't really capture the color and gloss but it turned out better than I thought it would: http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3644/...836bff3112.jpg The only drawbacks that I can see are that this is time consuming and the grain on the wheel is a bit diminished. But it has a little "character". And for about $50 you can't go wrong. |
Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
So, you gonna paint it?
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
That's awesome! you've motivated me to fix mine. I agree with what you're saying about fixing the old parts instead of repop.
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Quote:
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Beautiful!
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Wow, looks like you did a great job.
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
That looks awesome! I re-did a black wheel a while back. It does take some time...but as you have shown, it is well worth it. It is so much better to retore original parts than buy new re-pops. Especially since the re-pop wheels don't always fit properly. The only thing I did different was use POR 15 epoxy. Sweet :metal:
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
nice job, how much time ya got in it
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Thanks guys!
Quote:
epoxy: 1/2 hr filing/sanding: 1 hr primer: 1/2 hr wetsanding: 1/2 hr final paint: 1/2 hr So, approx. 4 hours but each of the 6 steps was a different day. I think I started this back in December or something rediculous. :lol: I'm really slow. |
Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
cool, nice job.
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Leevon,,,way to go!!!!
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
That looks real nice ! Great job !!!
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
wow,
That turned out sweet. Good Job. 50 bucks and time is better then $190 these days for a new one. I want to do this to my green one I bought from JAIMIE72 about 8 years ago. It is projects like this that make our trucks nice and special to each of us. |
Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
I wish I would have read this article a couple of weeks ago. I just bought a repop. for $200.00. I never had an original steering wheel, but after reading this, I should have gone to a junk yard and bought an original. Nice job.
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Great Job. I have a really bad sterring wheel and its the wrong color did not want to spend the $$$ on a new one. Thanks for the info and the walk through you just saved me $$$
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
Great job! Guess I'm gonna have to go look for some of that PC7 stuff...
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
that looks really good nice job
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
nice
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
That's awesome, nice work!
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
this posting is quite worthy of rep points and a permanent member of Krue's FAQ page!!!!
Very nice detail and explanation. I know ths will keep many from buying repop wheels to restore thier originals. hummmm, mater of fact, I may have to pick an old one up now and experiment. BRAVO LEEVON!!! |
Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
copied over to the FAQ area
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
thank you Liz. well deserving.
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
That looks really good, nice job.
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Re: Rebirth of my steering wheel
That is so cool, I read ESLL's(RIP)write up a while back, yours and his are both great, Now I'll have to restore my 72 wheel. Then go to the junkyard and restore a bunch of em and sell em!
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