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Discussion Topic:
Broken 1936 speedometer
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drkbp |
04-25-2011 @ 6:10 AM
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I should have said Waltham, not Waltrip in the above post. Sounds like you can use what matches the hydro gas gage for '35 and either the silver or brown for '36. Add 4 digit speedometer for deluxe and 3 digit for standard. If you wish to go into the speedometer: Your original question was can you get to the needle and the answer is yes. However, I would use a cable that is new. The bezel is spot crimped to the case. Loosen the crimps, take the bezel off and the two screws let the case come off. You may have to take the trip meter knob off to get the case off. I cleaned the inside case, glass, light ports, polished the rim and lightly lubed the speedometer before I put it in the car Saturday. As super and others have said, it is a delicate instrument and the post may be broken. I have not put a needle on one so I will stop here. I send my speedometers on my earlier cars to a speedometer man whose specialty is just that. Ken in Texas
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Grant |
04-27-2011 @ 4:25 AM
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A new old stock Waltham speedometer has been located. We are in the process of purchasing it. From the photo,I would describe the colors as follows: In the center circle, around the odometer numbers, golden brown. Around the very outside circular edge of the speedo face, about 1/4 of an inch wide, the same golden brown. The rest of the speedo face, in between the above inner and outer golden brown areas, is a yellowy beige shade which surrounds the markings for miles-per-hour. Red rectangles mark each five miles-per-hour of speed. The tail and pointer of the speedometer needle also appear to be red. The trip odometer has four digits. Its last zero is red. Waltham's number on what appears to be their original box is 5380. Handwritten by someone on the Waltham box label is "DeLuxe", "1000 m. trip" and "1935". Although it appears to be in lovely condition, I suspect that a 75 year old speedometer which has sat in a cardboard box on a shelf all its life is going to be in need of proper lubrication and a good check-over before installation. 37 RAGTOPMAN You have said: "lay the speedo down and use very light oil and lube the drive from the back, make sure this is also lubed and not sticking, 3 in 1 oil should be good". This sounds like an excellent recommendation which makes sense. A sticking problem inside Dale's speedometer itself might definitely have been what happened on the cold October morning. If I remember correctly, the squealing sound seemed to be coming from there rather than from the cable. Would there be a danger that light oil like 3 in 1 could drip down onto the back of the NOS speedometer face and cause damage to the brown colors on the other side ? Am I wrong to be concerned about that possibility ? Ken in Texas Regarding the speedo which you put into your '35 last Saturday, which was "lightly lubed" first and seems to be working very well, could you please advise what lubricant you used ? How much ? Also, did you lubricate the steel gears as well as the drive which 37RAGTOPMAN recommends ? With respect to the new speedometer cable which we are also going to install, I see that a fellow named Drake in Oregon is advertising new reproductions for $20.00. Has anyone used that product ? Is there an alternative supplier of a high-quality cable which would be a better choice ?
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37RAGTOPMAN |
04-27-2011 @ 8:32 AM
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GRANT you can also use graphite lock lube, you only need a little, the 3 in 1 oil will work itself it but just a little so it does not run all over, just oil laying down and as soon as you see it enter the back pickup and try moving the square drive on the back, till it is smooth, I think it would take quite a bit of oil to get inside, but just be carefull, hope this helps 37 RAGTOPMAN an KEEP on FORDIN,,!!!
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drkbp |
04-27-2011 @ 10:31 AM
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Grant, If the glass is absolutely clean inside and it cleans up outside, I would be tempted to put a little 3 in 1 oil in the hole provided at the rear where the cable goes. I think 37ragtop is on the mark. Not very much but just a little. When you turn the drive from the back you will be turning it counter clockwise and the needle will move in the proper direction a little. I'm with 37ragtop, if it turns smoothly I would put it in the car and go. What I would do is this. Put the new cable in and attach to drive gear under the car. Drive the car a mile or two and be sure the cable is turning smoothly. Then attach to the speedometer head and do the same thing. Stop if the needle jumps or if the speedo head makes ANY kind of noise. If it doesn't, mount the lights and put it in the dash. If it works correctly, the needle action is very smooth going up in speed as well as down. When you stop, it almost floats down to zero from 5 mph. I don't think I would go inside unless it's dirty behind the glass or you can see "stuff" laying inside. If you decide to, be very careful. The worm gears have a touch of grease and the shafts have a touch of oil. I put just a touch of oil on the ends of the shafts in the case and the trip reset shaft. It disengages the odometer from the trip meter so you can reset the trip. Clean off the excess oil so it doesn't run. I would not attempt to oil anything else. Do not touch or try to clean the face of the instrument. I found a contact in Ohio that does the speedometers. pm me if you decide to talk to someone that really knows what he is talking about which is not me <grin> I take it that it matches the other gages? Ken in Texas
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Grant |
04-28-2011 @ 10:22 AM
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Thanks again, everybody, for all the assistance which you have provided. We will be very careful during the installation process. And, I'll post an update on Forum when the job is done to let you know how well the NOS speedo works. With respect to color, the gauges in Dale's '36 roadster are the same as the ones in Jeff and Henry Horrocks' '36 phaeton which was featured in the January/February issue of the V8 Times. You can see an excellent photo of that speedometer on page 58. As noted by ford38V8 in this thread on 04-19-2011, there probably will be some fading in the old gauges as compared to the new speedo. If you are interested in seeing a photo of Dale's '36, take a look at the shots of the St. George meet which are posted here on the EFV8 site. One of them is a pretty nice close-up of the car.
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Henryat1140 |
04-28-2011 @ 4:38 PM
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Interesting discussion. In re the speedo in my car (36 Phaeton mentioned in above post) I really do not know enough of the history of the car to make a judgement that it is the original speedometer, so would suggest caution in concluding it is actually correct for the car. It has the three digit odometer. OTOH, the mileage reads 62,000 and that squares with the overall condition of the car. There wasn't a whole lot of parts switching in the rest of the restoration so it may be the correct one. Regards Henry Horrocks
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Grant |
04-29-2011 @ 7:09 AM
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Thanks for your comments, Henry. The NOS speedometer which Dale will be installing has four digits in the trip odometer rather than three like yours. And, according to the original box, the NOS speedo is for a 1935 Ford rather than a 1936. Using a magnifying glass on the photo of your speedometer on page 58 of the January/February 2011 V8 Times, it is clear that its colors are definitely the same as that NOS 1935 speedo: two tone brown and yellowy beige background, red tail and pointer on the needle, red tenths digit in the trip odometer, red rectangles for every five miles-per-hour, and a Ford script oval logo at the bottom in the six o'clock position. Perhaps the new speeedometer which we have just purchased is a 1936 model which someone has put into a 1935 Waltham box at some point over the years. Who knows. Searching through my old V8 Times, the only other photograph of a 1936 Ford speedometer which I could find is a black and white shot in the July/August 2010 issue of the one in Doug Downie's '36 pickup. It has a three-digit trip odometer like yours. The background colors are not identifiable. Maybe the authors of the EFV8 club book about 1935 and 1936 Fords could advise what "correct" is as far as speedometers are concerned. Our goal is to get a speedometer that looks right and works properly into the '36 roadster so that it can be driven from Edmonton to Auburn in time for the National Meet in August.
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