First task of the week was to measure up how much flat beading is required to finish the bus. This was ordered and delivered the next day. As the weather was unusually warm and dry, I next turned my attention to the remaining wheel rings. I wirebrushed, primed and painted another two sets, leaving one pair to do. In a spare few minutes I cut another short piece of vertical flat beading for the waistrail. As the warm weather continued, the opportunity was taken to continue painting the wheel rings and the cab door. What was supposed to be the final coat of paint applied to the inside of the cab door did not go on well, due to being insufficiently thinned. This will be dealt with as oon as it is hard enough to sand. A final coat of brown was also applied to the short deflector piece above the O/S rear window and to the cab window frame. A coat of silver was applied to the underside of the O/S rear wheel arch in preparation for rear wheel fitting, which will happen as soon as the tyres are fited. Attention to a lump in the bottom of the rear O/S window created a hole which I have no option but to repair with filler, as attempting to weld in this poistion is too risky. So the exposed edges were treated with No.1 rust beater primer in preparation for this. Work then turned to starting to reattach the roof sheet edges over the O/S windows; this included priming the saloon ventilator cover with No.1 rust beater and cutting new drip rail for the emergency door from “J” section.This needed curving slightly which required heating in the centre, then using the MW gearbox spacer that I have for this purpose in the vice. This was pretty much the last job of the week, apart from filling the first mounting hole for the drip rail.
Tag Archives: wheels
2/2/2025
First job this week was to finish countersinking the O/S half-round waist beading. Then I temporarily fitted the longest piece to align it and drilled enough fixing holes so that I could fit it myself. Noted some rust appearing on the non-opening window frame behind the cab. It sanded off easily, though. Next job was to prime the rear of the prepared beading, in lieu of using sealant which creates too much mess. I then decided the misaligned beading at the emergency door was not acceptable so moved the corner beading down by at least an eighth of an inch. This took a long time and was very difficult to achieve a good job. I shall tackle the emergency door next. An improvement in the weather meant I was able to finish painting four of the wheels and part finish the remaining three. I have run out of paint now so the three will have to wait but they are at least partially sealed. The following day was dry and sunny so I wire-brushed another set of wheel rings and primed them with red oxide, applying a second coat the following day. I fitted the long half-round beading on the offside but ran into a problem by breaking a small pilot drill with the end stuck in the hole, removal of which is a job for later. I next gave the primed wheel rings a coat of black enamel, then fitted the short piece of beading to finish of the O/S waistrail half-round beading. I needed to drill two extra holes in the beading due to the coincidence of holes with mounting screws for the panel work underneath. This means I have to fill the two unused holes, first job for next week!
19/1/2025
Started the week by stripping paint from the parts of the sliding frame of the cab window. I also prepared the first of the wheel rings for primer and applied red oxide to one side. The next day I applied the second coat of primer to the first set of rings, stripped all but the bottom section of the sliding pane and mixed the black cellulose for the wheels. I managed to spray the insides of four wheels the following day. Whilst the results were poor, a matt finish due to the cold and damp weather, this is ultimately of no consquence as I shall finish them in black enamel in due course. I managed to partially spray the first set of rings, too. I also primed the two verticals for the sliding pane. After that, I needed a rest from solvents so ran the cable that carries the rear light feeds from the box in the boot as far as the switch for the boot light, pending the arrival of some more cable clips. I next cleaned and primed the remainder of the frame parts for the sliding pane of the cab window and measured up the O/S of the bus for the beading. Final job of the week was to finish cleaning and polishing the glass for the sliding pain of the cab window and spray some of the frame brown.