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Discussion Topic:
35 Ford Center Hood Hinge
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trjford8 |
12-18-2021 @ 3:56 PM
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Senior
Posts: 4214
Joined: Oct 2009
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carcrazy, WD-40 would be a big "no no" prior to painting unless you like the "fish eye" look. The center hood strip on a 35 convertible sedan is a stainless channel and not a piece of round stock. You cannot spin it with a drill. The round stock only holds the hood sides to the tops.
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sarahcecelia |
12-18-2021 @ 3:28 PM
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Senior
Posts: 1187
Joined: Mar 2013
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What's a deill??
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flatheadfan |
12-17-2021 @ 3:43 PM
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Member
Posts: 450
Joined: Oct 2009
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Something I do when I reinstall the hood is to replace the steel rods with 1/4' brass rods typically found at welding shops. It creates a smooth -no rust situation that will quickly match the irregularity or the the hook loops and minimize paint chipping. . . Tom
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Peter in NH |
12-17-2021 @ 2:59 PM
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Member
Posts: 42
Joined: Oct 2009
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My center stainless hinge is an original. Thank you to everyone for your comments. Peter
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3w2 |
12-17-2021 @ 1:41 PM
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Senior
Posts: 835
Joined: Oct 2009
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Peter, I'd like to see what happens when you put a center hood hinge molding in a drill chuck (it would be a really big one necessarily) and spun it. Stand back! In any event, in my experience the area in question joining the two hood TOP panels was originally painted. Further, the ease of installing or removing the hinge molding is heavily dependent on the angle of the two top hood panels. The deeper/narrower the V formed by the two panels side by side usually makes for much easier removal and installation of the hinge molding, which is basically a tw0-person job. Lastly, if per chance the hinge molding is a reproduction (or a bent original), it will be a struggle, no matter what you try. In the case of the former, the thickness of the stainless steel is greater than that of an original molding. Dave
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1931 Flamingo |
12-17-2021 @ 10:19 AM
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Member
Posts: 387
Joined: Nov 2019
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Try lubricating it and spinning it in with a deill?? Paul in CT
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Peter in NH |
12-17-2021 @ 8:43 AM
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Member
Posts: 42
Joined: Oct 2009
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It's the stainless top hinge I'm referencing that is wicked tight and very difficult to install on the two top halves even given the fact that there's no paint in this area on both top halves.
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carcrazy |
12-17-2021 @ 7:37 AM
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Senior
Posts: 1655
Joined: Oct 2009
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What about just applying some WD-40 lubricant to the hood pin and reinserting it into the hood hinge? The hood/hinge assembly could then be prepped as a unit before painting.
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Peter in NH |
12-17-2021 @ 3:37 AM
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Member
Posts: 42
Joined: Oct 2009
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I'm getting ready to paint my 35 Convertible Sedan hood and looking for some advice. Yesterday I carefully removed the hinge from the two hood halves. It came apart very hard. There was no paint on the two halves that the hinge slide onto. Might that have been the way that area would have been addressed at the factory? I'm concerned if I apply anything other than a coat of epoxy primer to the two areas I'll never be able to get the hinge slid back on. It seems to me that Ford didn't make the hinge large enough to accommodate a couple of coats of paint. What have some of the rest of you done about this problem? Thanks, Peter
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