I am building a 1926 t sedan. I want to use something besides the stock material for the top. does anyone have a suggestion?
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I am building a 1926 t sedan. I want to use something besides the stock material for the top. does anyone have a suggestion?
What I would suggest is take some patterns of the curvature of the roof and then hit the wreckers yards to find a station wagon or car roof that is close to the patterns. Once you find one that suits rip the whole roof off through the pillars so that you have a reasonably solid structure to handle. With careful marking out then cut the desired piece from the donor to fit into the T Sedan. It sounds real simple when one types it but sadly, it is a big job but a well satisfying job once done.
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I was thinking about thin fiberglass or .050 thick al.
They use to seek ol' van roofs, might have to fill a few luggage rack holes. Welcome
I recall on an episode of Bitchin' Rides (Kindig It Design) they were fretting with a metal piece and Dave jumped in and in short order made a fiberglass insert that was perfect. I would think that fiberglass might be easier than the aluminum sheet to form the compound curve?
Fiberglass and/or aluminum may show cracks later due the different expansion rates, jMHO,
You can build up a thin plywood piece under the roof and fill it in with quik setting plaster---flie'sand it to the shape/contour you want and then lay waxed freezer paper over it and start glassin it-go to boat/marine supply places for the glass stuff
That is clever, you could also use the plaster cast to verify and correctly fit a metal insert..
The roof on a 1926 Model T is nearly flat. I would think a sheet of 18 gauge sheet metal could be used to cover the opening without a lot of shaping required.