Added "piping" to the seats to properly outline the insert. the primer can picked a good time to clog up.
This is how I had done the chassis all those years ago. I'll freshen it up a bit even if nobody will see it.
I've decided to join this. It will be centered on a Packard Super 8 which will be twin turboed and dry sumped. It will be mounted to a LeMans Rracer (haven't decided which yet) with a transaxle. The accessories will be donated by an old stock car (oil pump, fuel cell etc.) initially I had thought of a ProCharger or cramk driven blower but the front of the engine will be hidden. hence the turbos.
As I said in my March 17 post, ours had that and it was caused by not having an inner fender. I can't remember if they added one or not. By then the car was 3-4 years old and the paint had faded enough that the new fenders stuck out so they painted the whole car. We had to do it out of town as our dealer refused to do it.
Stripping is done. filling the scratches in the hood. Primer.
Motor is done.
Second round of filler on the seats
Added clear amber to the turn signals and some black wash here and there to the grille.
Spectacular! Impressive attention to detail. A pleasure to look at. As for the Gold Comet, are you building just the engine or was there a truck called that too?
Here's a few more Jeff. The White Arias heads illustrate what Mike is explaining above. You can barely make out the ARIAS on the white material. However I have other white stuff that is better. But the clear stuff is definitely the best.
Here is a set of injectors. I can try to get some closer clearer photos if you like. I think the finish quality will be your decision. What is perfect for one person may be mediocre for another.
After two days, not much of a strip. Looks like I had painted it dark blue initially then the baby blue to make it look like my wife's car. If the purple juice doesn't succeed, I'll go buy a bottle of brake fluid.