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Under cowl/inside firewall color?

Started by cboss70, May 01, 2018, 04:30:15 PM

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cboss70

I was looking at pictures on the internet of the area behind the glove box and gauge area and it seems some cars had a red oxide color while others had body color, black etc.  Should this area- the top of the firewall inside the car and the lower portion of the inside cowl the heater box hangs from be red oxide with black overspray(or whatever color your metal outer dash area was painted)?  Would it be the same for a 67 versus the 69/70 bodies?  Looking at images on the internet was no help  :)

Coralsnake

You can assume every plant and year will be different. They may be different in the same model year and plant. Typically, the areas you described have no paint, they are bare steel
The original Influencer, check out www.thecoralsnake.com

Chris Thauberger

Quote from: Coralsnake on May 01, 2018, 05:08:48 PM
You can assume every plant and year will be different. They may be different in the same model year and plant. Typically, the areas you described have no paint, they are bare steel

+1

Here is a picture of the interior side of the firewall after I cut the dash out. There was little to no paint on either the inner firewall or the back side of the dash.

For those interested I had no issue uploading this image. 8)

Previously owned:
1968 Shelby GT500 Gold Concourse
1973 Cougar
1968 Mustang coupe
1966 Mustang 4 speed vert
1965 Mustang coupe
1968 Cougar
1971 Montego
1968 Torino GT
1966 GT350H clone

Chris Thauberger

Here is how I finished mine. Figured it was better than the rusty bare metal.





Back side of the dash is covered with wash primer. The copper is weld through primer




Chris (what happen to the beer mug??)
Previously owned:
1968 Shelby GT500 Gold Concourse
1973 Cougar
1968 Mustang coupe
1966 Mustang 4 speed vert
1965 Mustang coupe
1968 Cougar
1971 Montego
1968 Torino GT
1966 GT350H clone

J_Speegle

Since the 67 had a welded in dash prior to paint application and the 69-70 didn't the access and exposure is very different just from the standpoint of air flow, overspray and direct application of paint.

If you provided what your working on then we can be more specific and possibly more help.
Jeff Speegle- Mustang & Shelby detail collector, ConcoursMustang.com mentor :) and Judge

cboss70

Thanks for the info. The ones I've seen look somewhat bare but I've debated just painting those surfaces to protect the metal or if it was considered a big no-no. I guess one option is you seal it and then coat it with red-oxide with overspray to give it a more authentic look. I figured it would be interesting to see how people handle that area on their cars.

I was specifically thinking of my Feb 70 Metuchen car and a May 67 San Jose car.

roddster

  Sub-issue:  The comment about no paint is correct.  However, in this era of mirrors and flashlights some judge is going to look way up there and take points off.  Not because you are trying to preserve the car for longevity (now 51 years old) but because no car can be perfect.

Chris Thauberger

#7
Quote from: roddster on May 02, 2018, 09:19:28 AM
  Sub-issue:  The comment about no paint is correct.  However, in this era of mirrors and flashlights some judge is going to look way up there and take points off.  Not because you are trying to preserve the car for longevity (now 51 years old) but because no car can be perfect.

Speaking as an entrant no comment was made reguarding my treatment of the area last year at Indianapolis. As a judge if I were to see paint under the dash I would probably not deduct points. If the paint was shiny and noticeable the most I might do is mention it to the owner/restorer. Others may have a different opinion.

IMHO Concours is about helping owners make choice about the accuracy of their cars.

Chris
Previously owned:
1968 Shelby GT500 Gold Concourse
1973 Cougar
1968 Mustang coupe
1966 Mustang 4 speed vert
1965 Mustang coupe
1968 Cougar
1971 Montego
1968 Torino GT
1966 GT350H clone

shelbydoug

On many cars that I have seen there is a mix of primer and body color over spray to some degree. The black looks nice but in my own mind I can make justification of spraying either the body color like on the floor or that crazy batch mix of sometimes pink, sometimes grey etc.

In any case I like your results.
68 GT350 Lives Matter!

Bob Gaines

Quote from: cboss70 on May 02, 2018, 07:47:30 AM
Thanks for the info. The ones I've seen look somewhat bare but I've debated just painting those surfaces to protect the metal or if it was considered a big no-no. I guess one option is you seal it and then coat it with red-oxide with overspray to give it a more authentic look. I figured it would be interesting to see how people handle that area on their cars.

I was specifically thinking of my Feb 70 Metuchen car and a May 67 San Jose car.
On anything short of a DIV I /Throughbred restoration there are easy solutions to the issue. If you want to protect it then prepare as you want but use a stainless steel wheel paint (whatever your poison) to mimic the bare steel for a top coat . It will blend in especially good for those areas that are hard to see. You want to do this before any other interior work is done like  red oxide or painting the dash so that you get the proper overspray in the areas that blow outs are typical over the 'bare metal".
Bob Gaines,Shelby Enthusiast, Shelby Collector , Shelby Concours judge SAAC,MCA,Mid America Shelby

Bob Gaines

#10
Quote from: Chris Thauberger on May 02, 2018, 09:44:29 AM
Quote from: roddster on May 02, 2018, 09:19:28 AM
  Sub-issue:  The comment about no paint is correct.  However, in this era of mirrors and flashlights some judge is going to look way up there and take points off.  Not because you are trying to preserve the car for longevity (now 51 years old) but because no car can be perfect.

Speaking as an entrant no comment was made reguarding my treatment of the area last year at Indianapolis. As a judge if I were to see paint under the dash I would probably not deduct points. If the paint was shiny and noticeable the most I might do is mention it to the owner/restorer. Others may have a different opinion.

IMHO Concours is about helping owners make choice about the accuracy of their cars.

Chris
It is all about choices . Some choices might have seemed good at the time. Not to dispute that a judge may choose to not deduct on something that they don't feel is a issue but a no comment on a detail issue may also result because it wasn't noticed ether. ;) For example if I saw the entire backside of the dash innerstructure and bottom side of the cowl painted something that didn't look very similar to bare metal or very light surface rust as typically found then in a situation where I knew that wasn't supposed to be then there would be some kind of deduction . But that is just me. Others may feel differently. It is better to be safe then sorry IMO especially when a solution is relatively easy . FYI I think your car was a great restoration .
Bob Gaines,Shelby Enthusiast, Shelby Collector , Shelby Concours judge SAAC,MCA,Mid America Shelby

J_Speegle

Quote from: cboss70 on May 02, 2018, 07:47:30 AM
Thanks for the info. The ones I've seen look somewhat bare but I've debated just painting those surfaces to protect the metal or if it was considered a big no-no. I guess one option is you seal it and then coat it with red-oxide with overspray to give it a more authentic look. I figured it would be interesting to see how people handle that area on their cars.

I was specifically thinking of my Feb 70 Metuchen car and a May 67 San Jose car.

As Bob wrote the choice of getting the surface nice then overcoating with a paint that appears to mimic bare steel is likely your best choice for that area. Then over that do the rest of the red oxide followed by the dash color and then exterior paint oversprays will replicate what is found on original cars for the 67.

For the 70, since the area is more exposed during the paint process you would follow the same steps only no interior paint since the dash is not installed and you end with over spray from the cowl black out as well as the other black outs over the body color step. Bare surfaces on this one are typically more of the surfaces that faced downward on the firewall and cowl panels IMHO
Jeff Speegle- Mustang & Shelby detail collector, ConcoursMustang.com mentor :) and Judge

Chris Thauberger

#12
Quote from: Bob Gaines on May 02, 2018, 12:31:08 PM
Quote from: Chris Thauberger on May 02, 2018, 09:44:29 AM
Quote from: roddster on May 02, 2018, 09:19:28 AM
  Sub-issue:  The comment about no paint is correct.  However, in this era of mirrors and flashlights some judge is going to look way up there and take points off.  Not because you are trying to preserve the car for longevity (now 51 years old) but because no car can be perfect.

Speaking as an entrant no comment was made reguarding my treatment of the area last year at Indianapolis. As a judge if I were to see paint under the dash I would probably not deduct points. If the paint was shiny and noticeable the most I might do is mention it to the owner/restorer. Others may have a different opinion.

IMHO Concours is about helping owners make choice about the accuracy of their cars.

Chris
It is all about choices . Some choices might have seemed good at the time. Not to dispute that a judge may choose to not deduct on something that they don't feel is a issue but a no comment on a detail issue may also result because it wasn't noticed ether. ;) For example if I saw the entire backside of the dash innerstructure and bottom side of the cowl painted something that didn't look very similar to bare metal or very light surface rust as typically found then in a situation where I knew that wasn't supposed to be then there would be some kind of deduction . But that is just me. Others may feel differently. It is better to be safe then sorry IMO especially when a solution is relatively easy . FYI I think your car was a great restoration .

You know Bob, sometimes I wonder how you draw these conclusions. You are right, it seemed like a good choice at the time (6 years ago). Why leave the under dash area all rusty/bare metal? Removing the dash and painting where paint was never applied seemed like a good idea.  Now the answer is obvious. Leave it alone or attempt to replicate the finish while preserving the look.

This "judging" role is forever a learning experience and I am glad to have this community to help keep me going the right direction. It still amazes me how obvious something is when pointed out in the context of historical accuracy.

Thanks for the accurate explanation. As soon as I finished reading it I was able to recognize the error of my youth(so to speak).  ;D

Also thank-you for the comment regarding my car. Acknowledgments from veteran judges such as yourself are difficult to described in words. It is genuinely appreciated.

Chris

Previously owned:
1968 Shelby GT500 Gold Concourse
1973 Cougar
1968 Mustang coupe
1966 Mustang 4 speed vert
1965 Mustang coupe
1968 Cougar
1971 Montego
1968 Torino GT
1966 GT350H clone

KR500

Chris
I do look in that under dash area when judging. I would make a deduction (and have) for excessive paint/primer under the dash. As for your car not receiving a deduction for this at Indy We just must have missed it. The lighting was poor and apparently We didn't look at that area hard enough.
Rodney
Rodney Harrold,Ohio SAAC Rep,SAAC 68 Shelby Concourse Judge,68 GT500KR 02267

Chris Thauberger

Quote from: KR500 on May 03, 2018, 11:37:19 AM
Chris
I do look in that under dash area when judging. I would make a deduction (and have) for excessive paint/primer under the dash. As for your car not receiving a deduction for this at Indy We just must have missed it. The lighting was poor and apparently We didn't look at that area hard enough.
Rodney

I understand Rodney. I have changed my position since post #7.

Chris
Previously owned:
1968 Shelby GT500 Gold Concourse
1973 Cougar
1968 Mustang coupe
1966 Mustang 4 speed vert
1965 Mustang coupe
1968 Cougar
1971 Montego
1968 Torino GT
1966 GT350H clone