Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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Believe the lens gaskets might provide two purposes. One is anti rattle so the glass doesn't vibrate or move in the retainers and second is to prevent any wind blown water getting back into the lamp housing.
If Steele doesn't have it I doubt anyone else will either. On most models which use lens gaskets and nothing is repro'd many have been able to make their own by buying 1/8" thick closed cell vinyl or rubber sheet foam material from places like McMaster or MSC. Am not sure what the originals were made of back then but were probably of a specific thickness. Using the sheet foam, if it is not quite the right thickness it has a bit more give and forgiveness unlike the solid rubber sheet. If you need thinner then some materials come in 1/16" but the choice is more limited and some may not be suitable for UV or outdoor exposure.
Posted on: 2018/11/4 11:54
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Howard
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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Home away from home
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Maybe i didnt give you a correct part number but this rubber part is actually attached to the bottom side of the park light housing right underneath where the lense sits here are a couple pics the rubber just broke away from the metal.
Posted on: 2018/11/4 12:17
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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The arrow that points to that piece is the group number you mentioned and calls it a lens gasket. Otherwise, no clue what it is or does. Maybe flackmaster has an idea. The flat piece with the two prongs looks like metal. If so, is there a bolt that goes thru the hole or do the prongs stick in the rubber or rest against something? Could it be used to keep the lens or housing centered somehow?
Steele shows nothing that looks like it in the electrical parking light category but Max lists that group number as a lens gasket and appears to carry the item as a pair. You might check with them and see if they still do and if their item is what you need.
Posted on: 2018/11/4 13:22
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Howard
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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Home away from home
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The metal clip holds the base gasket ( steele has or had them) to the light housing where it is over the head light cover. need pictures let me know. I would forget about the oil filter as with new oils and miles driven it is one less item to clean and was option.
Posted on: 2018/11/4 13:34
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35-1200 touring sedan 42-110 convertible coupe 48-2293 station sedan |
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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If the prongs hold the base gasket then Steele does have the long rubber base gasket that runs the length of the light housing. The rubber that would appear to keep the metal stationary in the housing is probably the part you need and I didn't see that at Steele. If the part Max has will not work what about getting some rubber edge trim from McMaster or MSC and wrap it around the steel plate and press that into the housing.
Here is a McMaster selection of edge trim showing several different styles which come in varying dimensions. One might have dimensions and a shape that if wrapped around the plate would substitute for a formed one piece rubber gasket. If edge trim won't work you could get a strip of sheet rubber in the needed thickness and make a one piece gasket.
Posted on: 2018/11/4 13:54
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Howard
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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Yeah I saw that a Merritt, I'll call tomorrow and see if they carry it....... Sorry hh56 I was trying to use your part picture of the front park light but didn't realize that it's the group my bad. That metal piece was sandwiched in the rubber and then t it was slid over the post those two teeth held it on the post. If Merritt doesn't have them then I will use some edge molding as suggested that's a great idea....... On another not I took the rear tailight bezels and the front park light housing in to be chromed and about shat myself on the money they to plate!!!!!!!
Posted on: 2018/11/4 14:25
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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Quote:
On another not I took the rear tailight bezels and the front park light housing in to be chromed and about shat myself on the money they to plate!!!!!!! At least you are in Utah where I doubt the platers have all the regulations to contend with. There is probably still some competition for them which you can benefit from. Between the Calif Air Resources Board which bans anything that stinks, the Calif version of EPA who goes after any kind of discharges that might remotely be considered hazardous waste and another Calif agency that seems to have their finger in lots of other places a substantial number of plating shops have decided the income does not pay for the hassle and have closed or moved. The few that are still working and willing to take walk in customers with their assorted bits and pieces know they have a captive market and price accordingly. Your seven exclamation points on a Utah price would probably rate a dozen if you had them done here.
Posted on: 2018/11/4 14:59
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Howard
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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Home away from home
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There are few shops here for sure but only a couple are worth a crap...... His explanation on the cost was that there was so many man hours in the pieces and the fact that they are pot metal so they have to be copper dipped then smoothed multiple times to Fill all the pits..... I'll post pics in 4-6 weeks when.they are done. Hes even plating the screw for the lense retainer
Posted on: 2018/11/4 15:14
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Re: Front Park Light Housing Parts Help
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Home away from home
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If you have major holes or pits, you can fill them in or fill with Muggy Weld. I've used it many times before sending the part out for chrome plating. You need to ensure the area is clean and to carefully not over heat it and to use indirect heat as the flux does not like flame.
Posted on: 2018/11/5 20:50
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