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Steering wheel emblem refurb help

Posted: Sun May 08, 2005 2:12 pm
by Shawn
G'day all,

I noticed that the cracks in my steering wheel emblem are much less visible when the emblem is wet, but appear again when it dries. I wonder if maybe a light oil (WD40?) applied liberally, allowed to soak in and then wiped off might go some way towards hiding them.

Does anyone know if this could be harmful to the plastic?

What about one of those vinyl 'nourishing' (eg Armourall) products?

Cheers,
S

cracks

Posted: Sun May 08, 2005 5:13 pm
by Willie
Which type of emblem are you talking about? The late dark type
which operate the horn are readily available. The earlier type
which do not operate the horn and are much lighter in colour are
quite rare in good condition.

RE: cracks

Posted: Sun May 08, 2005 9:58 pm
by Shawn
The early type - horn button on mine is on the stalk - '58 1000

centre

Posted: Mon May 09, 2005 9:28 pm
by Willie
Oh, you have the same purely decorative type as mine. It was
covered with hundreds of fine scratches and I hunted for some
time for a better condition item at the club meets. You must either do that or carry a wet sponge with you!! If the scratches are superficial
I assume that you could polish a good few out using cutting compound?

RE: centre

Posted: Fri May 20, 2005 12:21 pm
by Shawn
Just FYI - I've given an old badly cracked emblem a generous rub over with regular household olive oil and let it sit for a week. The cracks have almost completely dissapeared! It looks a million times better than it did.

Now just waiting to see if it turns white or disintegrates or something...

Cheers,
S

RE: centre

Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2005 3:24 am
by Shawn
An update for anyone who's interested:

Image

Painted the background in as close a match as I could find and Oliveoiled the front...

RE: centre

Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2005 9:21 am
by Onne
looks splendid

RE: centre

Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2005 11:58 am
by Pyoor_Kate
What did just occur to me is that there are 'cd-scratch repair kits'. I don't know what's in these, but it may be worth an experiment....as a more permanent cure. I'd check that it's not going to do anything too unpleasant on a scrap piece of the right sort of plastic...

Re: RE: centre

Posted: Sat Jun 04, 2005 3:14 pm
by forbesg
Pyoor_Kate wrote:What did just occur to me is that there are 'cd-scratch repair kits'. I don't know what's in these, but it may be worth an experiment....as a more permanent cure. I'd check that it's not going to do anything too unpleasant on a scrap piece of the right sort of plastic...
Hi Kate, good thought. Unfortunately, CD's are made from a plastic called polycarbonate, the badge is something else (my guess is some type of resin). So it may not work.
A word of warning though... Be careful when putting using chemicals on plastics, as many (such as polycarb) suffer from something called chemical attack. Which may cause cracks, stress and/or crumbling.

Having said all of that, good luck!!

Re: RE: centre

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2005 4:08 pm
by betjent
Shawn wrote:An update for anyone who's interested:

Image

Painted the background in as close a match as I could find and Oliveoiled the front...
Hi mate
What colour did you use for the background - the name of it ?
Want to do the same with mine :)

cheers
carsten

RE: Re: RE: centre

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2005 10:35 pm
by Shawn
G'day,

It's a Humbrol brand oil based Enamel (Model aeroplane paint) dark red. It's not metallic like the original paint, but does ok as a colour match. I'll see if I can find the little tin with the colour number on it tonight.

Cheers
s

RE: Re: RE: centre

Posted: Fri Jul 29, 2005 7:52 am
by Shawn
G'day again - it's Humbrol #20

Cheers!
s