This is how it goes when resurrecting dead cars; you spend
95% of your time restoring individual parts, only 5% actually building the car.
I painted the car, true, but it’s too damn cold to wet sand
anything, so I decided to install the wiring harness. I positioned the harness in the body but
found that the dash locates it, which means I needed to complete the dash, so I did. But installing the dash would be stupid
because all the sanding and polishing threatens my lovely burl walnut dash.
So, I figured I would install the rear suspensions. Which means I needed to measure and bend the
hard brake lines on the rear axle. Which
means I needed to prep and paint all the rear brake hardware. Then I found that I couldn’t finish the brake
lines until I ordered new wheel cylinders…
I think you see how this is going.
Since I’m restoring the rear suspension, may as well do the
front suspension at the same time, right? Only
logical...
Prepping and Painting Suspension Parts - the axle
housing took a lot of elbow grease, putty knives, scrapers, and thinner soaked
rags to cleave 60 years of oil-caked dirt before I could unleash the sand blaster
on it, not the indoor bead blaster, mind you, but the outdoor, siphon fed one
that blows grit into places you don’t know you have.
Where we started |
After scraping, cleaning and sand blasting |
After painting with Eastwood's Extreme Chassis Black (It looks better than my photo shows, I promise.) |
The rest of the hardware, including the front suspension
A-arms and assorted hardware took TIME and much compressed air. Each piece required a minimum of two sessions
in the bead blaster, most took four or more.
The pivot arms of the front upper and lower A-arms had to
spend several hours in rust dissolver, then several sessions in the bead
blaster. The air compressor is tired!
Half cleaned: pic shows the blasting sessions to bare metal (The backing plate is powder coated.) |
All but the A-arm is powder coated The A-arm is Extreme Chassis Black rattle canned (needs another coat) |
The powder didn't stick well to the upper A-arms Should have blown off the powder and spray painted it |
I first applied the powder coat primer (grey). The black powder didn't stick to the primer - I think because the primer insulated the metal |
The leaf springs only sucked a little. The hardest part was pushing the old bushings
out, actually holding the spring while holding the “pushing parts” (sockets and
whatnot) in place and pumping the press jack.
Rust requires persuasion! Yeah,
the rubber part pushed out easily, but the steel outer sleeves were tough. I finally found the right combination of ½”
sockets, metal plates and hunks of steel and pipe to break rust’s formidable grip. Cleaning them was easy enough. I clamped them down, slapped a wire cup to my
4” grinder and had a time with them.
Some lacquer thinner finished the job.
The bushings before I started pressing them It doesn't show in the pic, but I marked where the bushing offset goes
|
Bushings, post-pressing |
As it turns out, pushing out the A-arm bushings was a bigger pain, requiring all my ingenuity, my entire collection of sockets, and some yoga moves to press them out. I had to press around the pivot bars without bending or marring the A-arms themselves. That took a sentence to write but an entire day to execute. AND I’ll have to press the new ones in (should be easier though, no rust, clean and slick).
Paint - I painted the big pieces with Eastwood’s Extreme
Chassis (gloss) Black primer and paint.
I used the spray gun for the axle housing, front crossmember and leaf
springs, but either powder coated or Extreme Chassis Black rattle canned the
remaining pieces.
Eastwood’s Extreme Chassis paint is brilliant stuff, creates
a cracking, shiny finish. But it takes at
least two days to dry. I found that it still
leaves fingerprints in the gloss after a day.
I powder coated as many of the suspension parts as would
fit in my oven. Powder coating is,
hands-down, the best and toughest coating for parts facing the slings and
arrows that undercarriage parts must endure.
Assembly is where progress ground to a halt. Bending brake lines requires massive patience,
double, triple, quadruple-checks, some luck, and the right tools. (Measure six times, lay it out and stare at it
for a LONG time, test fit it, before even contemplating cutting anything!) Sunbeam “helps” us by making some of the brake
fittings bubble flares and others double flares. I may do a side post about how to make each,
but I only had a flaring tool for double flares. I had to buy a kit (Harbor Freight again!) that
makes bubble and double flares. And I
had to learn how to manage it. How did I
restore junk before You Tube?!
I bought a brake line set from Sunbeam Specialties, so I
knew I would have to bend and fit the lines.
(To be fair, nobody makes a pre-bent set of lines for Alpines.) But I ordered the wrong kit. I ordered the kit for early Alpines (I think),
which don’t have “T” junctions on the rear axle. Not a big problem in that I was only missing
one line, which I added to my next order from Rick and the crew at Sunbeam
Specialties.
It could be that I got the wrong brake line kit altogether
or my Alpine is weird, but Alphie’s “T” junction requires bubble flares while
the wheel cylinders require double flares.
All the flares in the kit are double flares, and the lengths are a bit long
for the locations. Since I have to re-flare
the ends, it’s good to have some extra length.
Left - bubble flare, Right - double flare (I made the bubble flare, not perfect, but it will hold pressure) |
Wheel cylinder with double flare cone receiver at the hole |
Alpine junction with bubble flare receiver - a concave dish, no cone This is the "+" junction in the engine bay |
Here’s where things stand.
I have gobs of bright glossy suspension parts laying about waiting to be
assembled, with about $800 worth of parts in shipment. When I manage to get everything in the garage
at the same time, I’ll chuck them together and suspend Alphie!
In the meantime, I think I’ll bolt Alphie’s little motor to
the shiny front crossmember and fit it in Alphie’s chest. We’ll see how many unforeseen tasks that digs
up!
Some More Pics:
Leaf springs, painted with new bushings, rubber wraps and shiny new hardware |
The bubble flares, the other ends have double flares Thanks Rootes Crew! |
Alphie has a new rear end! |
Shiny new brake lines - a few crinkles, but not bad |
The front suspension is next with all spanking new parts! (The chunk of angle iron on the lower A arm is to prevent smushing it when I press in the new bushings.) |