[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [New Search]
TobyE=> What are people's thoughts on taking an Exacto(TM) blade and => verrrryyyyy carefully cutting a slot for the chrome trim in a => chromeless seal? Not to be a wet blanket, but it seems to me that getting a usable result with a knife would be practically impossible. You not only have to make an even cut along curves in a convex, resiliant surface, no mean feat by itself, you also have to get it the right depth and make an even void to hold the chrome without bunching the rubber. That wouldn't even be fun to watch. Further, it looks to me as though the Cal-look rubber has a higher, rounder exterior profile than OEM, so even if you miraculously got the cut right, the chrome strip would ride too high and look distinctly odd. Better all around to stripe the rubber with silver paint or tape, imho. It might be possible to engineer a special jig to lower the Cal-Look profile and cut a trench for the strip on the same pass, but it seems a lot simpler to engineer a mold and make some correct rubber. Who's falling down on the job at West Coast Metric, anyway? Maybe all it would take is a letter campaign by a band of Squareback owners .... Steven Ayres, Prescott AZ Editor, Flat Four Fetish Features '66 Type 343 Ghia comwest@well.com