Bondo makes a nice product that is used to repair bumpers. You can spread it
into cracks and gouges, let it harden and then sand it down, using
progressively finer grade paper. It dries black so you do not have to paint.
Once you are satisfied, you can polish it out with Brasso or a similar
product to get a final sheen.
Scott Suhring
Mechanicsburg, PA
'70 TR6
'59 TR3
-----Original Message-----
From: triumphs-bounces@autox.team.net
[mailto:triumphs-bounces@autox.team.net] On Behalf Of Brian Jones
Sent: Saturday, October 25, 2008 5:25 AM
To: triumphs@autox.team.net
Subject: [TR] TR3 Steering Wheels
The steering wheel on my TR4 seemed to be a grey, fibrous material. I
took care to not breathe it in.
You can buy a kit from Eastwood:
http://www.eastwoodco.com/jump.jsp?itemID=2569&itemType=PRODUCT
Or you can put a kit together yourself.
PC7 is the filler in the Eastwood kit. It is available from any decent
hardware store, HD, and Lowes. It sets to a similar density to the
original wheel casting.
For the cracks, a used a dremel to cut out grooves from this ||, to
wider fissures shaped /__\ as much as possible, much wider than the
original cracks.
Give yourself the time to sand the PC7 back to the original contours.
This is the time-consuming part, if you take care.
The pick up a primer and top coat of your choice. I went with an
plastic adhesive promoter first in case the sanded original surface
had any plastic-like tendencies, then a sandable primer (x2), then top
coat (x 4 coats).
Brian
ve
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