Saturday, May 26, 2012

Mirrors

Even though 739 could move without its side-view mirrors, that's just one of many safety components that have to be in place to get on the road. This Friday afternoon the weather was so nice, I had to take a half-day of vacation and spend some time on various projects, including removing the two mirrors for replacement glass.

Each is held on with a hex head cup point set screw. I actually had a wrench that fit! And I had been taught to use plenty of PB Blaster. What could be easier? I started with the driver's side mirror.


After maybe up to 40 years of holding that mirror on tightly, that screw was not about to budge. It  had bonded well over the years and based on the fact that it would not move, I wondered if the parts might have welded together over the many years of sun and weather. So over to the passenger side.


Same story. But I knew to tap with a hammer, use a vice-grips for some leverage, and give that PB Blaster some time to work.


I guess I shouldn't have been surprised, but that passenger side set screw finally moved!



And then too, so did the driver's side!


Then off came the two mirrors, right? Not at all. One didn't budge a bit and the other at least turned a few degrees in either direction. More PB Blaster, more back and forth motion, and eventually, the two mirrors gave up. You can see a bit of clean up is in order before reassembly.



On we go.....





Sunday, May 20, 2012

Preservation Before Restoration

To my surprise this past week, I noticed flapping plastic from the roof of #739. I had just stopped by to drop off some parts, so I went inside and sure enough, the plastic above each of the four skylights had ripped. And I knew storms were coming Saturday evening.

So Saturday about noon, all I could find was some dry cleaning plastic and duct tape that ran out too soon! I found a substitute and this week will tell whether or not the patch job will hold until the skylights can be replaced. And did it hold against the torrential rains that fell Saturday evening?

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

The Glass

A Scenicruiser has 37 pieces of window glass, ignoring details like double-panes and the small sliding door for the driver. Part of restoration is to bring back the tinted glass to its original appearance. That is hard to do. The original window glass was two pieces of safety glass with variable green vinyl in-between to provide sun glare protection. You either cannabalize from another PD-4501 or you put in your own window material (glass or plexiglass) and tint it, usually with a film on the inside.

739 could be in better shape when it comes to the glass, but it could be worse. The numbers don't quite tell the story. With twenty-one good and sixteen cracked, we're doing better than 50/50, but it's the curved glass that's impossible to mimic easily. The flat glass on the sides is much easier; each sash has two panes of glass, one for each half that slides open.

We're fortunate to have both lower windshields, the driver and door glass, both 'D' windows and the upper-left opera glass, as well as the two rear side pieces. The full inventory is below.

So here are the tough pieces we're looking to replace:

  • both upper windshields
  • the right-side triangular opera window
  • the rear center window
For the skylights, the current thinking is to remove the broken double-paned glass and replace with a single pane of tinted plexiglass which should curve to fit the seal and opening.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Next Steps

Thanks to Andrew and Ted, we now know the cooling hoses leak and replacements are ready to go. Once we can find the date/time to remove, replace, run and pressure test, we can inspect the air system and many other components which require the bus to be running.

We'll definitely want to know that all leaks are fixed since it'll take 12 gallons of anti-freeze and 11 gallons of distilled water to fill it up!

Friday, April 20, 2012

Ignition!

It's looking good for the future. Ted and Andrew started 739 for the first time last Wednesday in two years and it fired up in under 10 seconds! This gave just enough time to determine next steps: need two new radiator hoses and at least one valve in the air system.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Light and Smoke

One restoration job you can do at home while the Minnesota winter encourages you to stay inside is the light and smoke vent covers above every set of two seats. The units have two glass lenses that focus the light to its passenger and two smoke vents with sliding covers to increase the intake of surrounding air. Each unit is held to the rack by two screws. When removed, they will typically show their 50+ years of wear.



There will usually be multiple layers of paint from the various interior rebuilds done by Greyhound and by later owners. In this example you can see at least three former paint jobs. Note the encouragment to 'Please Open When Smoking.' The glass lenses are, of course, in the middle, and the heads of the two screws holding this evacuator unit in place are visible next to the lights. The two holes are for the single throw toggle switches still up in the parcel rack space with the bulbs themselves. And the small rectangular openings at either end are where the smoke is pulled in when the slider lever (which protrudes from the square hole in the middle) is opened.

A look at the back will reveal what needs to be restored and what the tasks might be.


You will typically see rust, dirt, bug parts and a variety of historical miscellanea that need to be cleaned out. There is a felt or maybe horsehair-type seal that surrounds the light lens sub-assembly and that will need replacement.


When the lens sub-assembly is removed (the two screws and washers at either end), the unit can be removed from the cover. The two glass lenses are held in by 3 metal brackets with a screw and washer for each, assuming parts haven't been lost in the past as in this case (one missing bracket).

The lenses can be easily cleaned with Windex, but if missing or chipped/cracked, you'd only be able to hope to find a replacement from someone who had removed these units from an RV Scenicruiser conversion.

The brackets can be brushed to remove the corrosion, as can the screws and washers, although the latter can be replaced as well. Note that the entire lens housing is surrounded by what appears to be a paper seal which will typically need replacement. I may use plumber's tape unless I find something more suitable.


In the photo above, you can see the remnants of the paper seal which surrounds the lens sub-assembly. The entire metal surface will be cleaned but not painted since there is no need to do so and it preserves the part numbers and the helpful notation: Outboard Left Front. The black rectangular seal I will probably replace with adhesive-backed felt or something comparable. Both seals were undoubtedly designed to keep out smoke and keep in the light.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Signage

A Scenicruiser also has a lot of signs inside to read. I'm not sure which came when it was originally made in 1956 and what has been added before its last years in Greyhound service and whatever came later. Here's what I've found so far: