I'm currently restoring my 1958 4 door and was wondering if anybody had an inkling on constructing rear wheel spats. The idea that I've had is to construct them out of aluminium as this is quite light weight. I have no idea how you would go about attaching them to the wings or any details really as information on this appears to be a bit thin on the ground.
Any thoughts would be much appreciated as I'm scratching my head in confusion
I know someone who makes them out of vac formed plastic for lorry applications. They attach with simple clamps holding the lip of the spat to the lip of the wing. The company is called "Spatz" and is in Birmingham if you need to talk to them about the possibility of Minor ones....
[sig]8426[/sig]
Compare the Minors - Simples !! http://mog.myfreeforum.org/index.php
I have seen this done once on a moggy and it did make the back end of the car look "heavy". Might be worth mocking one up before you do it for real just in case you do not like the final look.
Thanks for the replies, it's certainly given me some options to think about
Sorry I'm not sure how the quote thing works ( I am luddite )
bmcecosse
Posted: Feb 02, 2009 - 08:03 AM
'Heavy' ? I would say 'ridiculous'!
I happen to quite like how they look on the back of a minor when done nicely. They may not be to your tastes but different strokes for different folks and all that.
How wide do you need them to be, and is it for both front and back?
Conventional way to do them is to pie cut and then bend the wing outer flange outwards, then reweld, fill and paint. For the rears on high cut wings you can weld a flange on to the wing lip, shaping to what you require covered. Alternatively, rear wings come in 2 and 4 inch oversize.
I never found suitable aftermarket 'spats' (wheel arch extensions) for a Minor, but Jonathon at JLH may do them.
What size of wheel/tyre combo are you needing to cover?
PSL184 wrote:I thought he meant this type of spat ?
<br><br>
( I figured the quote thing out, hurrah! )
Indeed! thats exactly what I meant
tortron, that sounds like a good method of construction but like stag36587 says, I'm not sure how they attach to the wings. From what little I've seen there seems to be a spring mechanism on the lower corners, I'm wondering if just simple clips could be used around the top edges to hold it in place around the inner lip of the wing?
charlie_morris_minor wrote:
If you have seen it done and you are happy with the look go for it I just would hate you to do a lot of work and then not like the final look.
Hopefully it'll look ok, my metal working skills are.. lets say passable at best, I just like looking for ways to over complicate matters ;)
I made a few sets when I first started doing metalwork. Based on a period photo in on eof Ray Newall's books. I did them in aluminium (just because they were lighter) with a wired edge for stiffness. They had three 'tabs' on the back, spotwelded on that went up inside the wing, and another tab at each end that you can see in the picture, where a screw could be screwed up into the wing flange to hold them in place. Never sussed out a better method than that. Looked neat enough, but a fiddle to do a tyre change at the roadside I guess...
Think I made about 3 sets, two went to California and one to a guy in Scotland (you know who you are!) so its a fairly exclusive accesory! Never seen any 'real' period ones... Good luck with making some!
cheers
Iain
Fairmile Restorations.
'49 MM, '53 convertible, '55 van, and a '64 van.
Marina p.u., '56 Morris Isis Traveller, a '59 Morris JB van, a'66 J4 van, a '54 Land Rover, Land Rover 130, Renault 5, '36Railton, '35 Hudson, a Mk1 Transit and a Sherpa Camper...
A car can be restored at any time, but is only original once!