Jump to content
Model Cars Magazine Forum

Recommended Posts

Posted

A thought here:   The bottom of the rumble seat interior is what appears to be holding the rear of the body too high, some file work there should cure that so that the body shell sits down evenly from front to rear.  As for mating the rear fenders to the body--some Evergreen sheet styrene ought to do that for you.

Art

I think if I cut off the Duesy floorpan right behind the splash aprons, I'll lose just the right amount of height, unless it rests on something more forward. But that looks like it is the culprit.

Posted (edited)

I cut the back floorpan and the back sets right but the front is too narrow for the splash aprons. So I cut them off and will make new ones. Wish me luck.

IMG_4327.JPG.991aa26aeb92a9cfd12c93131fa6d9b2.JPG

IMG_4328.JPG.6fab0c289948e76aa00cca6ee929dfa7.JPG

IMG_4329.JPG.7f997509d33c214e408bdf2d13b62f07.JPG

Edited by landman
Posted

Pat, you might consider doing what any coachbuilding firm (even a competent body shop) of that era of wood-framed metal skinned coach built car bodies did: They changed the cowling (firewall back to the A-pillars)  to match the hood contours--this was done numerous times when Duesenberg owners (generally 2nd or 3rd owners of used but very serviceable Model J's for example).  There are numerous photo's of such conversions (more in the books I have than online) clearly showing this.

One compelling reason this got done when moving a coachbuilt body from some other make to a Duesenberg J chassis was simply due to the fact that with the Model J, the firewall was a cast aluminum piece, and structurally  far more a part of the chassis than the body--and that firewall tended to dictate the shape and contours of the cowl, often even the forward, perhaps 25% of the body.  Often this worked pretty well--but sometimes, due either to costs or a lack of restyling skill on the part of the particular shop doing the body swap, such conversions did not come off well--but when done on a brand-new chassis, by a reputable coachbuilding firm--certainly overseas--British and European coach builders did make very successful blends of the Model J's signature radiator, hood and firewall into their otherwise significantly regional body styling.

Art

Posted

Art, that is what I'm planning to do in that gap. I'll bring the cowl to the firewall/hood assembly. However, like you say, changing the cowl back to the windshield might be simpler. I'll try both.

Posted

Art, that is what I'm planning to do in that gap. I'll bring the cowl to the firewall/hood assembly. However, like you say, changing the cowl back to the windshield might be simpler. I'll try both.

It probably will look better.  In the bargain, you ought to be able to extend the raised moldings onto the Duesenberg cowling with Evergreen strip styrene as well.

Art

Posted (edited)

Following Art's lead, i cut both cowls off then Mated them together with a gap that I filled with styrene. A butt weld would have been impossible here. :rolleyes:

IMG_4341.JPG.36c620d43e5ae6c0acf80a9d455ee4eb.JPG

IMG_4343.JPG.752b997b484d26a1bd5817e625fef719.JPG

IMG_4344.JPG.99ad0ac2914db5f1a3cc5904babe2922.JPG

 

Edited by landman
Posted (edited)

After several coats of different color fillers I think we have a cowl/hood match.

IMG_4346.JPG.dbfc3a53eb5c01af6e0e88e7436271de.JPG

IMG_4349.JPG.8d06f516b456e600cc62bbaa433a7d96.JPG

IMG_4351.JPG.14d967123b83d5af574bb4fab5a56086.JPGIMG_4348.JPG.63eb6df120d4729a293dd22424bb28cd.JPG

Started working on the engine

 

IMG_4352.JPG.63e0804b7876121ef2a6c90ac0db6bee.JPG

Edited by landman
Posted (edited)

Working on the splash aprons. The cross piece at the rear is just a spacer. It will be cut and the ends will hang on pieces of styrene glued to the frame rails. Will add gussets to reinforce the assembly.

IMG_4366.JPG.b19aa00e504aa4ead35d022b4c03f205.JPG

IMG_4365.JPG.52f314de052155164c09519edfc141fb.JPG

IMG_4362.JPG.f9f7b8627f96f519abbc8b775b95fbfa.JPG

Edited by landman
Posted

This looks great. The one thing that I might consider would be redoing the mouldings. Your call of course. 

Yes, I intend to bring the hood moulding up to the upper belt moulding. I also plan to make a cowl moulding out of half round.

Posted (edited)

We're leaving for a few days, so I thought I'd prime the body so it cures well. It will also bring out all the warts and flaws I'll have to address.

spacer.png

 

spacer.png

Edited by landman
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

First update in 2 weeks. Busy, busy, busy. Body work is ongoing

IMG_4392.JPG.8b5302dc64f221657d47d10bb117ce65.JPG

Chassis is coming along. The Lego block is the spacer required  to line up the hood & cowl.

IMG_4391.JPG.dee9b9df4160dbc355fc8d4e5fd2b9de.JPG.

IMG_4390.JPG.18e6ec66e571919230735b3b3e6a409e.JPG

Looks like blending the Duesenberg instrument panel to the Rolls/Brewster dash will work

IMG_4393.JPG.30070bcad59b36d5dc5406616cdeeccf.JPG

 

Edited by landman
Posted

You probably know this because you seem well versed in Duesenbergs but as a thought,  Duesenberg instrument panels were mounted to the firewall with aluminum brackets and tubes.The wiring ran inside these tubes. You could do something similar by fixing the firewall in place and use the back as a foundation for a mounting bracket.  Attach the instrument panel and fill the gap with a piece of plastic,  ahem, upholstery,  and walla, problem solved.  I personally really like the red chassis. 

Posted (edited)

Sanded the filler on the splash apron. Put it back together to check fit, alignment, etc.So,so. I have to modify the moldings. Wiull likely sand down the flat molding on the hood, remove the flat I added to the cowl and bring the ones on the body forward with half round.

IMG_4459.JPG.0fdf529151683debde71818154ea71de.JPG

IMG_4461.JPG.8417868e5aa56cb5b167e12d8a6f9367.JPG

IMG_4462.JPG.bc73c1ce477e338ed17aa9ae0974a261.JPG

Played a bit with the interior parts.

IMG_4458.JPG.627494dac963cf14bacb39c56b92da27.JPG

Edited by landman
Posted

You could pull the upper mouldings diagonally over the top of the hood. I've seen some French bodied cars with that sort of treatment. This keeps looking better and better. 

Posted (edited)

Made some filler parts for the dash ends.

IMG_4465.JPG.452d28724b5916f4b97f8b77e2071d48.JPG

Remade the moldings to match the roadster body's.

IMG_4466.JPG.2b1e6c80c4304e7307dc440b990c5e9a.JPG

Edited by landman

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...