-
10-14-2006 06:15 PM #16
Holy Mackeral Brian. What a tremendous amount of work you put into this thread. I think Tweedy is paid for and then some.
You may have just saved some prospective Duval owners some big bucks.
Thanks for all the work.
Don
-
Advertising
- Google Adsense
- REGISTERED USERS DO NOT SEE THIS AD
-
10-14-2006 06:42 PM #17
Speedway sells Duvalls for 1k-4k depending on the car model. Gonna bookmark this, I'm going to need this in the future. I like the Duvall look, but not the price.You don't know what you've got til it's gone
Matt's 1951 Chevy Fleetline- Driver
1967 Ford Falcon- Sold
1930's styled hand built ratrod project
1974 Volkswagen Super Beetle Wolfsburg Edition- sold
-
10-15-2006 05:40 AM #18
Nice stuff Brian.
Your skills with CAD - or whatever program it was - really make it easy to follow.
Does the windshield frame turn out sorta heavy?
I'm guessing not since so much of the base metal is cut away.
In any event, it couldn't be heavier than the cast brass ones.
Besides the looking good aspect of it, with the windshield sides going further to the side than a regular roadster windshield, it looks like the occupants are well protected from the wind.
Probably better than the old style flat windshield with windwings....C9
-
10-15-2006 05:56 AM #19
Actually the frame turns out very light. The one I modelled for this "how to " article is relatively "to scale" and my engineering software can give an exact weight, based on the density of steel being 0.283 pounds per cubic inch---the frame complete weighs 12 pounds (without glass).Old guy hot rodder
-
10-15-2006 06:42 AM #20
Thanks.
I would have guessed twice that.
Surprising too how much glass weighs.
Several years back I built a large hanging on the wall cabinet for Sweetie to display her teapot collection in.
I'd planned to put a glass door on it, but calculating the weight of the glass made it way heavy.
Then I bought some Lexan . . . and used part of it in another project so still no door....C9
-
02-06-2017 10:32 PM #21
Thanks for the process and pics , can't wait to give it a go on my chev .....Paul.
-
02-07-2017 05:23 AM #22
Thanks for the tutorial!Robert
-
02-07-2017 04:54 PM #23
This thread is 11 yrs old. I remember Brian and enjoyed his posts.
Welcome to Club Hot Rod! The premier site for
everything to do with Hot Rod, Customs, Low Riders, Rat Rods, and more.
- » Members from all over the US and the world!
- » Help from all over the world for your questions
- » Build logs for you and all members
- » Blogs
- » Image Gallery
- » Many thousands of members and hundreds of thousands of posts!
YES! I want to register an account for free right now! p.s.: For registered members this ad will NOT show
Welcome to CHR. I think that you need to hook up your vacuum advance. At part throttle when cruising you have less air and fuel in each cylinder, and the air-fuel mixture is not as densely packed...
MSD 8360 distributor vacuum advance