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Old 02-18-2015, 02:17 PM   #1
farmputzer
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Default Shock absorber paint question

How were the original shock absorbers painted? Before assembly? After assembly? Was the shaft masked off or the entire shock painted?
Thanks for a response.
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Old 02-18-2015, 04:31 PM   #2
Mike V. Florida
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Default Re: Shock absorber paint question

Yes, painted gloss black after assembly. I read this in a restoration manual.
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Old 02-18-2015, 08:29 PM   #3
glenn in camino
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Default Re: Shock absorber paint question

I've seen a Model A chassis with painted shocks but bare metal shock arms.
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Old 02-20-2015, 11:03 PM   #4
gwhite
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Default Re: Shock absorber paint question

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Late 1930's Houdialle factory service manuals call for them to be painted "M-1713 Air Dry Black Enamel" FWIW, M-1713 corresponds with Ford chassis paint (V8 era).

Model A era shocks were most likely sprayed with asphaltum-based enamel and would have a gloss level similar to wishbones and axles. Marco's website (www.abarnyard.com) features a photo of a chassis on the assembly line with painted shock bodies (approximately similar in sheen to the wishbones/axles) and unpainted shock arms. It is likely that the shock arms would have been sprayed with pyroxylin (nitrocellulose) on the line during touch-ups, so the shock bodies would also probably have some overspray from that process.

I spent many hours filling and blocking my shock bodies trying to make them 'perfect'. They're not quite as glossy as the photo illustrates, but the black color is a spot-on match for contemporary Ford black asphaltum enamel (not all 'blacks' are 'black'). Oh, and the shaft should definitely be masked off...

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