I have heard guys talk about grinding it a bit to roughen it up, filling it with JB Weld, sanding it nice and painting it. I have no idea if it lasts well but I'm guessing it would, never tried it.
I had a painted wheel in a car for at least 5 years and the paint held up perfectly though.
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1966 Strato Chief 2 door, 427 4 speed, 45,000 original miles
1966 Grande Parisienne, 396 1 of 23 factory air cars
I picked up a pretty good "survivor" wheel which is blue, like my interior. I also picked up a not as nice beige wheel which I will try to restore. Therefore, I hope to be able to provide a success story a year from now...
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"So when you spot violence, or bigotry, or intolerance or fear or just garden-variety hatred or ignorance, just look it in the eye and think... The good outnumber you, and we always will." Patton Oswalt
I've kind of taken up fixing them as a hobby lately, the JB Weld/Epoxy treatment seems to be pretty bullet proof as far as durability and being close to the same density of the original GM steering wheel material.
Try PC-7 epoxy, work well, it is what eastwood co sells in thier kit.
It is only avail in the USA tho, and almost any hardware store down there. Look it up on hte web, PC-7.
also, i use automotive 2 part plastic repair, bodyshop quality 3M stuff for repairing ridgid plastic. I use E-Z sand plasitic parts repair, works great.
Temperature and climate changes will produce hairline cracks but i have some that i did 5-8 years ago, adn they still look new, with just hairline cracks, it woud be impossible to eliminate cracks, they shrink and stretch in our climates
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Beaumontguru
MY BEAUMONT HAS 4 STUDDED TIRES AND 2 BLOCKHEATERS......AND LOTS OF OIL UNDERNEATH. The other one has a longer roof.
No previous experience on a wheel, I used the grind out, sand, PC7, sand, spot putty, fine finish sand, prime, fine scotchbright, paint and clear on my 65 wheel. Came out good for a first attempt.
No big chunks missing like Brad describes, but all I will say is the amount of time you put into it will be reflected in the end result. I could have went even further in fine working it, but didn't.
You could probably build up the large missing area a little epoxy at a time, maybe some kind of fiber reinforcing below the finished level?
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65 Laurentian post, 67 Grande Parisienne 4 door HT.
hi have fixed two wheels i sand blasted the hole wheel with very fine sand like glass beads ...then used J B weld then primed the hole wheel with 2 part primer ... painted looks factory
Nope, not on a truck like that! Factory powerglide automatic is the cats ass!
I had a 65 c10 factory PG, rare as hell.
Love that dash, i see you collected lots of rare options, i had them all for my truck too, except the factory AC, that a rare one!
Guage cluster, with tach, vac guage only for big trucks but totally cool factor, radio, custom cab interior, bright knobs, custom cab steering wheel, AC, Automatic, You just need the 4 way signalstat to make it complete!
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Beaumontguru
MY BEAUMONT HAS 4 STUDDED TIRES AND 2 BLOCKHEATERS......AND LOTS OF OIL UNDERNEATH. The other one has a longer roof.