I used that product on the steering wheel of my 57 Fury, which was absolutely basket case-throw-it-away material. It had more of the wire of the wheel showing than there was plastic left! There were whole sections where the plastic had dropped right off. My experiences were: It is real easy to work with It leaves a beautiful surface, ready to paint You are able to recreate entire missing sections with it The finished product is rock-hard. However, after a year or so, it is starting to show signs of cracking beneath the surface of the paint. Not much, but cracking all the same. It seems to get worse when parked in the sun all day at a swap meet or something. Basically the core of the wheel is solid steel, which is going to heat up and expand in the sun-no way round that. So whatever goes over the top has to also heat up and expand and then contract again, causing hair line cracks. I see no way round this. It is still real nice to look at if you don't look too hard-they are only tiny hair line cracks, and I am prepared to sand it back, reapply the putty and repaint every three years or so if necessary. It is not that big a job if you keep on top of it and don't let it get to the stage where you have to replace entire sections. Overall, I think the product is as good as you will get. Glenn. Lars Larson 56 Plymouth wrote: > STEERING WHEEL REPAIR KIT > browsed in barnes and noble this AM and was it Rod and Custom or mebbee one > of the Mopar mags that had a 2 page detailed article on the kit. Chek it out. > It uses a 2 part epoxy putty that you mold by hand and squoosh into the > cracks after cleaning adn doing some misc work. > all FYI > L. > > http://www.por15.com
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