Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Rolling Chassis!

I have assembled the axles and we have a rolling and steering chassis. After a few pushes in the yard, it is official that we need to get some motors. This thing is heavy. Axel assembly went well, I'm still procrastinating the brake assembly.

Love the giggle in the video. Again, still looking for a videographer...

So, hoping to get the brake on the truck in the next few days and then it is off to accessories.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Paint is done and time for steel part assembly

I finished painting the tub and am now ready to start assembling the steel parts that will be the axles and brake. I plant set this up with the hand and foot brake as a push car and then add the motors down the road.

I sealed the car with Kilz, primed it with automotive primer and had the pastel green matched as best as I could.

In hindsight I would have done a color match for exterior household paint and gone that route as the automotive paint is more time intensive and just more work. I did 2 coats of paint and did add a rattle can clear. Not sure that the rattle can clear was worth it. Between coats I wet sanded the finish to make it as smooth as possible. The Preval kit was helpful as I think using a compressor and HPLV gun would have been too much for me. Although I did go through a few refills and had to mix reducer with paint.
























Here you can see the rear axle lined up and getting ready for mounting. I missed the pilot hole that was to be drilled in the floor panel in the instructions, but with some emailing with Toylander I was directed to page 8 in the manual and had the correct measurements. Next up will be the front axle install and then the drilling and assembly of the brake. When assembling the tub I installed the panel with the holes for the brake incorrectly so I filled them with wood fill. I will now need to re-measure and re-mark them on the tub.



Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Progress

The third box was located this past week and we now have all the accessories to get the tub assembled and then to get the body work done.

Filled all the holes and wing panels with wood filler. I chose wood filler as it is easier to work with for me than Bondo and smells less. Originally used a tube of wood filler that was sandable and all that- ran out of that after a few minutes so switched over to a tub of wood filler and the same spreaders used with Bondo- much better application. Since I didn't have sand paper for my palm sander I was hand sanding- takes forever. I switched the paper on the belt sander and the sanding went faster and looked much better.




I have been researching online and at different paint stores the best way to seal and paint the tub. I sent photos to my Rover auto body shop and they sent back an estimate of $700-$800 to spray the tub. With that price in mind, I am going to be painting it myself. Originally I was going to do Tangiers Orange but I've since realized this is actually Tegan's truck and not mine. So, I was between white and green- both age and model correct colors. We voted on the pastel green. I found the color codes and headed to the auto body paint supply store with my scrap piece of Medex MDF. After searching and cross referencing we were finally able to locate some colors in a book that were correct Rover colors. Although none had the name Pastel Green and none of the color codes I found were a match for the store. We finally selected a color and had it mixed up. Originally I was going to have them make me aerosol cans of the paint and that would be it. That turned out to be cost prohibitive so the nice guy at the store showed me the Preval system. With this set up you get the almost equivalent of a HPLV sprayer with a disposable system. I'll take notes and we shall see how it actually turns out.

The general consensus online has been that I need to seal the MDF with diluted wood glue before I can prime and paint the tub. After talking to a few folks around here I have decided to use Kilz primer to seal the tub, gray automotive primer and then color. There will of course be sanding in between coats to make the finish look as smooth as possible. The thought was that we live in a dry climate and the car will have minimal exposure to moisture so the multiple layers of sealer, primer and paint should protect the body. I have been very diligent in my spraying of the Kilz to ensure adequate coverage of the seams and cut sides of the MDF.


On the underside of the tub I did use silicone to seal the cut edges of MDF as well as any seams and gaps between pieces. I then applied two coats of Kilz and sealed it with gray primer. The silicone didn't leave as smooth a finish as I would have liked but I don't think it's obvious unless you are really inspecting the underside.

My plan is to paint the underside of the tub with flat black and then use the color on the top and interior. I found a graphic artist to print out the TReK decals to scale so that I can apply those to the hood and doors.

I've been repairing CNC machine errors this week too. I installed the long interior pieces to complete the sides of the tub and then used 1/4" round to give the rounded edge effect. The screen piece is on and the errors from the CNC machine have been filled. The dash has been modified to be LHD but I have been struggling with filling the RHD steering column hole. I may need to start over on that part but I am not great with cutting and that has a 20 degree angle on the front. Giving the wood filler a few more days to set up and see what happens.