<< home
Become a Member | Photo Gallery | Contact Us
The Antique Automobile Club of America discussion forum is a FREE online community for those interested in exchanging information about ALL antique, classic, and collectible automobiles. AACA membership IS NOT required to register. Explore, read, contribute, and enjoy!
Search
Participating Clubs
Sponsors







Raffle - Support This Forum!

RAFFLE!
2008 Saturn Sky
Red Line

Donate instantly with PayPal®.

Support the AACA and these free forums. Only 2,000 will be sold at $50 each. Click here for more details.

Drawing Oct 11, 2008, Hershey PA. Need not be present to win.

SEMA


Go to SEMA Action Network for the most up-to-date legislative info related to our hobby.

Who's Online
34 registered (HRP, Mark_Blodgett, 91Polo, tomt, robert d. klein, Jim Rohn, 4 invisible) and 199 anonymous users online.
Forum Stats
25242 Members
87 Forums
114555 Topics
507990 Posts

Max Online: 479 @ 03/26/08 04:18 PM
Newest Members
Glen Brown, robert d. klein, Paul_Nevells, danny buckner, rebecca.garvin
25243 Registered Users
Need Help?
Lost your password? Can't remember your username? Having registration problems? Answers to many of these problems can be FOUND HERE!
Page 1 of 1 1
Topic Options
#497765 - 03/27/08 11:26 PM 36 Roadmaster Running Boards - Where to next?
JoelsBuicks Online
Member


Registered: 03/10/08
Posts: 24
Loc: OK
Well I think I've made a diligent effort to find someone who would restore the running boards for my 36 Roadmaster and so far I've come up empty handed. There are restorers who have many molds for many makes and models but not the 36 Roadmaster. One guy in Ohio says that he would build a mold but only for an order no smaller than 20 sets at $1000/per set. I found another guy in Ohio that would like to do some improvising and then send it to a guy in Georgia for vulcanization - one possibility. These are all really nice folks I've talked to but I wanted to poll the crowd here to see what has been tastefully done with running boards. My 36 will be a driver, restored as much to original as possible. Any suggestions?

Thanks,
Joel Wilson
_________________________
Joel Wilson
BCA #43854
36 Limited
36 Roadmaster
37 Special
47 Sedanet
60 Electra

Top
#497831 - 03/28/08 10:00 AM Re: 36 Roadmaster Running Boards - Where to next? [Re: JoelsBuicks]
DaveCorbin Offline
Member


Registered: 02/19/06
Posts: 604
Loc: Texas
Dear Joel:
I faced the same problem about 28 years ago on my 1939 Roadmaster. My solution was to cleanup by sand blasting all rust, removing as little rubber as possible. I then made blocks of hard rubber from big axle stops, which I glued on the ends with a 2 part rubber molding compound. I then filled in all the other missing places with strips cut from truck inner tubes, bonded on the same way. A lot of Dremel tool work and fill-in with the 2 part rubber stuff. At the end, I found that if I rubbed my fingers across the stuff while it was setting, it took the "shiny" appearance off and left a surface that looked right. After 28 years, everything looks very good. It only took me 100 hours work per side and 4 months to get it done.
Regards, Dave Corbin

Top
#497867 - 03/28/08 11:38 AM Re: 36 Roadmaster Running Boards - Where to next? [Re: JoelsBuicks]
eric_b_1937 Offline
Member


Registered: 10/10/05
Posts: 36
On my 1937 Buick I am going to try to restore the running boards with the Rino liner method. You spray the rubber material over the original hard cracked rubber and sand it to shape. What is the condition of your boards? Mine has a few chips missing, I think I will fill with some sort of epoxy putty.

If that method does not work I haven't lost much money and I will then send it to the restoration shop in Georgia.

Top
#498389 - 03/30/08 07:27 PM Re: 36 Roadmaster Running Boards - Where to next? [Re: eric_b_1937]
Dynaflash8 Offline
Member


Registered: 03/03/01
Posts: 838
Loc: Sebring, FL USA
If the running boards aren't too bad there is some stuff that you can use to make them look like new. It's the stuff the body shops use to fix these plastic bumpers and stuff. We've molded whole new sections of missing board. Also Hunley Acuff in Georgia probably can make you new running boards.
Top
#498692 - 03/31/08 11:42 PM Re: 36 Roadmaster Running Boards - Where to next? [Re: Dynaflash8]
JoelsBuicks Online
Member


Registered: 03/10/08
Posts: 24
Loc: OK
Thanks for the info. Dave or Dynaflash, do you know the name of the 2-part rubber molding compound you used? My boards are in terrible shape with more rubber gone than left. Maybe I'm not seeing things correctly but it looks like a flat mat that is square on the ends and doesn't wrap or anything except lay flat. Each end of the running board contours around the fenders, but those places are painted and not covered with rubber. My 37 Special is different in that it appears that the whole running board was encapsulated in rubber. Hunley has a mold for the 37 but not the 36 roadmaster. Thanks again for the help.
_________________________
Joel Wilson
BCA #43854
36 Limited
36 Roadmaster
37 Special
47 Sedanet
60 Electra

Top
Page 1 of 1 1


Moderator:  BUICK RACER, R W Burgess, 24T42, Peter J.Heizmann, Steve Moskowitz, Brenda Shore, gagliaj 
Hop to:

Generated in 0.054 seconds in which 0.004 seconds were spent on a total of 13 queries. Zlib compression enabled.