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SeventhSon

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Posts posted by SeventhSon

  1. After a year off due to COVID the Labor Day Car Show returned. It was interesting to see what kind of cars were there and what kind of cars were not there. Seems like there were more modern cars, like the new Corvettes, the retro muscle cars, resto mods, but much fewer of the 40's and 50's American steel. I missed my '61 Biscayne bubbletop, and numerous others like it. Could it be that the older folks with the 40's and 50's classics decided to stay home away from the crowds (it was crowded, made me question my own sanity for being out in it). Anyway, here's one interesting entrant.

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  2. On 8/30/2021 at 1:17 PM, TexRiv_63 said:

    After considering this for a while, I started thinking about blackwalls mostly because I have been a big booster of using them on pre-war cars since the vast majority of those cars did not have whitewalls when they were new. My dad bought a new 1960 Ford and it had blackwall tires but he always went for low-content cars. When 1960 Buicks were new I wonder what percentage of them came with wide whites? So I tried some very amateur photo retouching and was actually surprised to see the blackwalls don't look too bad! What do you think?

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    The whitewalls lend a certain elegance and with the blackwalls it looks like a getaway car parked outside a bank getting robbed. Either way it's a beautiful classic!

    • Haha 1
  3. Maybe you should try this stuff to help dissolve anything the ultrasonic missed: https://products.liqui-moly.com/radiator-cleaner-7.html  (Use at your own discretion).

     

    Or maybe you should run some anti-freeze in it instead of straight water. My Avanti ran hot like that when I first awakened it from its 25 year slumber, and after running anti-freeze mixture in it for some time it has gone down from the temp gauge being pegged (first drive) to hovering around 180. I believe the anti-freeze helped dissolve old deposits in the radiator.

     

    Not sure about the backfiring - is it still running rich?

  4. 15 hours ago, Awesome cars said:

    I found out that my engine was painted blue would that be why I can not find a number that is supposed to be stamp where it is pictured or does that have nothing to do with that 

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    I would take a wire brush to that stamping surface and get the paint and rust off. Maybe it's just my eyes but I think I can see a hint of a "zero" number. I believe you'll find the serial number under all that paint and rust.

  5. I had a Volvo P1800 that did the very same thing. A Volvo mechanic told me to remove the gas tank and thoroughly clean it, and especially clean the pickup inside the tank, I thought, "Nah, it couldn't be anything that simple". But after several more weeks of frustration I pulled the tank and cleaned it out and cleaned the pickup filter. Started and ran fine after that for the rest of the time I owned it, several years. There was a bunch of grit and rust in the tank that, after a few minutes of driving would collect around the pickup filter and cut off the fuel supply. Not sure if the Studebaker has the same type of setup in the tank or not, but I would definitely clean the tank.

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  6. I had a friend who did body work and in a situation like this he would cut out the bad metal using straight even lines, but leaving any good metal. He would then either fabricate new pieces using the old as patterns, or better yet, find a salvage yard and cut the needed pieces out. After trimming and matching up the new pieces he would braze them in, grind the areas smooth, and use a little filler. Trying to weld that metal is just going to destroy it and cause endless frustration.

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