Below are some shots of what I experienced as being either the second or third hardest original part to acquire individually. The dreaded speedster lower windshield frame. This piece was part of an entire frame I had to buy for 3K just so I could get it in the done column. The previous owner had it mounted somehow on his roadster and for whatever fitment issues had cut about an inch off of the rightside lower and the right side upper. My first upper frame was prestine so I kept it and this lower section together.
Great part! Original shape intact with nice chrome. Only drawback was that clipped right side end.
A replacement section had to be fabricated. My mentor Greg parker helped me fix this way back in '02. What was great about greg's place was the amount of scrap material laying around to fix just about anything. We found our donor material in this old brass bell he found at the bottom of his scrap brass barrel. It was cut in half and the donor portion was heat and hammered into basic shape. Lots of careful filing and shaping would be next. Pictured here are the remains of the bell. The left over shaped repair section and the final repair which has now heavily tarnished from the years.
new section silver soldered into position and in final shape.
Getting that half-moon profile along with that gentle sweeping curve took some time and patients.
Ready for replating or maybe not. The rest of the frame is beautiful and I'm now thinking I'll just mount it as is and leave this section raw as a reminder of my old friend and all that he taught me. Thanks for reading this! Justin
Great part! Original shape intact with nice chrome. Only drawback was that clipped right side end.
A replacement section had to be fabricated. My mentor Greg parker helped me fix this way back in '02. What was great about greg's place was the amount of scrap material laying around to fix just about anything. We found our donor material in this old brass bell he found at the bottom of his scrap brass barrel. It was cut in half and the donor portion was heat and hammered into basic shape. Lots of careful filing and shaping would be next. Pictured here are the remains of the bell. The left over shaped repair section and the final repair which has now heavily tarnished from the years.
new section silver soldered into position and in final shape.
Getting that half-moon profile along with that gentle sweeping curve took some time and patients.
Ready for replating or maybe not. The rest of the frame is beautiful and I'm now thinking I'll just mount it as is and leave this section raw as a reminder of my old friend and all that he taught me. Thanks for reading this! Justin
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