[AJD] Steering wheel restoration 1939 H
John Paur
johnjanpaur at directcon.net
Tue Nov 29 15:53:13 PST 2005
Bill, You know what works really well on that is a black felt tip pen. Use
one that has a broad tip. Maybe it's too late now that you've painted it but
you might try sanding it to rough up the paint and then use the pen. John
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bill Brueck" <b2 at chooka.net>
To: "'Antique John Deere mailing list'"
<antique-johndeere at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 1:06 PM
Subject: [AJD] Steering wheel restoration 1939 H
>
> I'm getting to the finishing touches before I paint my H.
>
> The steering wheel had a few nasty cracks but was otherwise pretty good.
So
> I filled them with JB Weld and filed them down sorta OK. I'm not much of
a
> sculptor. But I thought if I painted it with flat black when I got done,
> the imperfections wouldn't show up all that much.
>
> Problem is that the nice new can of flat black Rust-Oleum I bought goes on
> real shiny. I thought maybe it was reacting with the grip material so I
let
> it dry real well and coated it again. It still looks shiny.
>
> So I bought a can of cheap flat black enamel from Fleet Farm. I didn't
put
> it on the wheel yet but I did do a test paint on a board, alongside of a
> test of the RustOleum. Both samples look pretty shiny to me.
>
> What am I missing here?
>
> B²
>
> Bill Brueck (brick)
> Chatfield, MN, USA
>
> Confusion is a higher state of knowledge than ignorance.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Antique-johndeere mailing list
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/antique-johndeere
>
More information about the AT
mailing list