R. Thorne Posted August 1 Posted August 1 After finishing my Corvette NHRA Stocker, I remembered I had started this car about 4 years ago. I had to dig up some old WIP pictures (only took a few). I am going to endeavor to finish this one. Here’s the beginning body work from 2021.
Altered Ego Posted August 2 Posted August 2 This car and the Blue Hell were two of my favorites Corvettes from this era. I can't wait to see the finished product.
R. Thorne Posted August 2 Author Posted August 2 10 hours ago, Altered Ego said: This car and the Blue Hell were two of my favorites Corvettes from this era. I can't wait to see the finished product. Hopefully, it won’t take too long. From 2021, some engine work and header trial fitting. The headers came from an amt partspak, I think. 1
R. Thorne Posted August 2 Author Posted August 2 As this car ran a B&M clutchflite trans, I thought you guys might like this information I dredged up in 2021. 1
R. Thorne Posted August 2 Author Posted August 2 This is how the clutchflite evolved for me then. Sawed off the stick trans, cut the bellhousing off an Mopar 727 type auto trans, used an bellhousing out of an partspak, then some sanding on the front of the Mopar trans. Also, a pic of the specialized B&M throwout bearing adapter. 4
R. Thorne Posted Monday at 03:47 AM Author Posted Monday at 03:47 AM My last update on what I had accomplished back in 2021. I think the car was painted with Testors metallic green and lacquer thinner (this was in my airbrush days). I had put some larger slicks on and had test fit the chassis and hood. 2
M W Elky Posted Monday at 07:00 AM Posted Monday at 07:00 AM It looks great so far I also have one of these as a stalled project so i can’t wait to see how yours turns out. On the one I was building I just couldn’t get the hood right . It looks like you have it pretty spot on 1
papajohn97 Posted Monday at 04:09 PM Posted Monday at 04:09 PM Very cool build Ron. If you don't yet have decals, Fremont Racing Specialties ("paintinjoe" Joe Curtis on eBay) offers a nice set at a very reasonable $5 + shipping. His listing also features some pics of a nice built model of this car. I forgot how fast these supercharged gassers were (9.79 -144 mph, WOW!). Looking forward to seeing this one posted in 'under glass'!
R. Thorne Posted Tuesday at 02:07 AM Author Posted Tuesday at 02:07 AM One of my stumbling blocks a few years ago was headers and I had put some small block Chevy partspak flanges on and test fitted the individual tube headers on. After looking at them today and my allergy to inauthenticity arose again. I did a little research and found a decent set of big block headers in my 67 Chevelle. Were the Jardine headers on the car equipped with collectors? I don’t know, but sometimes you have to use a poetic license. Painted them and the lower trim with some Fusionfirm.
R. Thorne Posted Tuesday at 02:08 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 02:08 PM 21 hours ago, papajohn97 said: Very cool build Ron. If you don't yet have decals, Fremont Racing Specialties ("paintinjoe" Joe Curtis on eBay) offers a nice set at a very reasonable $5 + shipping. His listing also features some pics of a nice built model of this car. I forgot how fast these supercharged gassers were (9.79 -144 mph, WOW!). Looking forward to seeing this one posted in 'under glass'! I am always grateful for helpful information. Fremont supplied me with those decals in 2021. Though not as fast, the blown small block of Moody & Jones’s C/GS 37 Chevy that I saw run in the 60’s remains my favorite sounding car. Someday I will finish my model of it (sigh!). 2
R. Thorne Posted Wednesday at 02:18 AM Author Posted Wednesday at 02:18 AM Some Hasegawa chrome and some Tamiya paint on the bellhousing, as the acrylic marker orange was a bit off in color. I cut off long thin strips, then stretch and apply. Virtually no cutting on the body. Done in one hour. Much easier on these old eyes. 1
papajohn97 Posted Wednesday at 03:30 AM Posted Wednesday at 03:30 AM 1 hour ago, R. Thorne said: I cut off long thin strips, then stretch and apply. Virtually no cutting on the body. Interesting that you applied the BMF this way. I recently foiled a build with frustrating results because of soft molded edges on window frames. The X-acto tip kept wandering on me. I removed all the BMF and precut lengths with the width eyeballed to match the final frame widths and just applied the foil strips along the edges of the front & rear windows using tweezers, a foam swab stick and my fingertips. It came out great without the need for any X-acto cuts on the body and was much quicker. I'm going to use this technique on future builds and ditch the X-acto knife cuts directly on the body wherever I can. Your foiling looks great on this vette using this technique.
R. Thorne Posted Wednesday at 04:51 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 04:51 PM Keep in mind that this is Hasegawa chrome with its advantages and disadvantages over Bare Metal Foil. It is inherently flexible and, more importantly, stretchy. This creates issues with the width of the strip you are installing. But, it doesn’t break easily like BMF. It allows me to use one long strip, for example, to go all the way around the rear window. You can also pull it back off and reapply it if you misapply it the first time. I use my fingers to hold one end in place and press it down with another finger while stretching it slightly. No adhesive residue is another plus. While my work is not perfect, it suits me and frees up some time on my builds.
R. Thorne Posted Thursday at 02:05 AM Author Posted Thursday at 02:05 AM Installed the “glass” and those pesky tailights. Had to ream out the holes and finally got them to fit. Started to use canopy glue, but it came out real thin and runny (haven’t used it in quite a while). Usually use Bsi gold ca, but wanted to try something different. Instead, went with Alene’s quick dry tacky glue.
R. Thorne Posted Thursday at 02:07 AM Author Posted Thursday at 02:07 AM Instructions for the Fusionfirm “chrome”. 1
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