DONE. Well kinda, still need some center caps and I will need to either clear the wheels or ceramic coat them to protect them... but they are on the car!
What are they?
Well these are a vintage Shelby Viper wheel... the style is most well known as American Racing Equipment (ARE) Libre Wheels and very popular in late 1960s and early 1970s and were run on Alpha Romeos, Datsun 510s and of course Datsun/Nissan Z race cars (240, 260, 280).
Why am I so excited?
I got these wheels from a couple that was parting out a 1973 Datsun 240z up in Grand Rapids, MI. I got them for a steal cause they were in fairly bad shape. Well, good enough shape that in my first year I threw a set of Falken Azenis tires on them and used them for racing... they held air, but didn't look 100%.
Original Look |
Sanding and sanding |
This whole project was a labor of love... it also took team work, as I might have quit on them several times, and I think the color I planned to paint them (satin black) would have been a mistake. So what all did it take?
First step was I clean them up. I did a light hand sanding on them, used a palm sander and realized these were going to need a little to clean up. So I had them sandblaster, in retrospect I should of only sand blasted the backs... but hey you live and learn.
Second step was sanding... I originally started with 320 grit... and realized I had to start back at 150 grit... I used some grinding wheels to start. Then by hand at 150, 180, 220, 320, 400, 600, 800, 1000, 1500, and finished with 2000 grit... sounds like a lot of steps and it was. The first few grits I was doing about 20-30 minutes per wheel... and it got less and less and ultimately yhe 2000 grit was maybe 2-3 minutes per wheels just cleaning them up and getting them ready for polish.
In the middle of that, at about the 400 grit mark (about 50% of sanding complete) I painted the backs of the wheels flat black. I did this on previous wheels, they look sharper longer like that and clean up from brake dust and track rubber sling easier.
Picking Colors... Silver or Gray? |
Then I pealed the tape and buffed the lips of the wheels... they looked great, and at that point I estimated I spent about 2.5 hours on each wheel. It was time to shop for rubber, get valve stems, and mount/balance them. I wanted to do this myself, mostly cause I didn't want the wheels scratched up on install (I ended up scratching them myself anyways...).
Well there is the finished product... 14x5.5 Shelby Viper vintage wheels for Me and My Z. It was a labor of love, and there has been a cool sense of pride as a drive around town on my Fairladys new shoes.
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