Refurbishing Wheel Covers (was "Wow! 1967... ")
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Refurbishing Wheel Covers (was "Wow! 1967... ")



Title: Re: IML: Refurbishing Wheel Covers (was "Wow! 1967... ")
Yes, keep in mind that those years at least are balanced. They are balanced at the factory, not when they are on the wheel. If the pieces are not reassembled exactly as they came apart, this could contribute to them flying off the car at the least little bounce. They were hard to keep on the car when new & now that they have been on & off countless times, they  are very easy to dislodge.
John
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2003 8:52 AM
Subject: Re: IML: Refurbishing Wheel Covers (was "Wow! 1967... ")

This is a task of great fun (if ya like that kinda thing), if only to count the hardware and experience the weight of the covers. I believe they tipped my scale at 13.5 lb, which is about 50% more than the entire alloy wheel of one of my modern cars! I have also seen a photo from the factory back in '67 that showed a woman with a stack of them to her side, balancing each one on a fixture. She was balancing just the wheel cover, no wheel in sight!

A few tips when restoring them:

1.) To see the correct paint scheme for your year, use the wheel cover guide on the club website:
<http://imperialclub.org/Repair/Wheels/covers.htm>

2.) When painting the areas that require paint (usually matte silver and flat black for these years), I recommend stripping the old paint off (fine steel wool will usually do it), masking the areas to be painted (have fun cutting the circles!) and then starting with a coat of epoxy primer. I have found this to be the only way to keep your new paint from practically washing off the next time you clean the whitewalls.

Hope this helps you have show-quality wheel covers!

Chris in LA
67 Crown
78 NYB Salon


DONALDDICKINSOND@xxxxxx (DONALDDICKINSOND@xxxxxx) wrote:

I have spent a couple of days refurbishing my hubcaps.  This is a neat project as these hubcaps break down into parts that can then be easily be cleaned and/or repainted and wow what a difference when your done (a lot of bang for your time)!  Of course when you do this all of the warts show.  I have rebuilt these by separating the good parts from the not so good parts.  I would be interested in any good parts you may have to replace my not so good parts.


Home Back to the Home of the Forward Look Network


Copyright © The Forward Look Network. All rights reserved.

Opinions expressed in posts reflect the views of their respective authors.
This site contains affiliate links for which we may be compensated.