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Hey gang, it was finally warm enough to turn the Speedster on for the first time this year. When disconnecting the battery tender, I noticed the cap covering the passenger-side jack point hole fell off sometime during winter hibernation.

before slapping it back on with some generic super glue, I figured I’d check with the brain trust and see if there’s a “right” way or material to affix it?  I don’t want to do it slap-dash only to lose it on a drive in 2 months never to be seen again.  I’d have to call @chines1 and beg him to ship me a replacement…

Thanks!!

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If you are going to use silicone, and I'm not sure that's the best idea, I'd be using a neutral cure rather than an acetic bathroom silicone. Neutral cure is better for outdoors, and less likely to make a mess of paint etc as it doesn't have the same acidic composition as bathroom and tile silicone.

Having said that, is the cap supposed to be removable? If not, I'd be more inclined to use something like sikaflex, which is a lot stronger than silicone and won't get brittle over time like silicone

Last edited by 550aus

It is functional as access to torsion bars since you can run either torsion bars or coil over on our rear.  You have coil over so it is unused in your case.  

They were just glued (methyl methacrylate) to a stud with a flange and metal backer, just like an original as pictured above.  The other piece is under the car in your photo.  If overtightened (which likely happened when we installed them) it cracks the glue and it will fail over time.   You can re-glue them, but we now tab over the top of the backer with fiberglass after they are glued so they can never come apart.  You can send all the pieces to me and I can reattach it and glass it up and send it back.  If you are just going to reglue it, use something 2 part like JB Weld and just snug the nut lightly on the backer bracket when installing.

Last edited by chines1
@chines1 posted:

It is functional as access to torsion bars since you can run either torsion bars or coil over on our rear.  You have coil over so it is unused in your case.  

They were just glued (methyl methacrylate) to a stud with a flange and metal backer, just like an original as pictured above.  The other piece is under the car in your photo.  If overtightened (which likely happened when we installed them) it cracks the glue and it will fail over time.   You can re-glue them, but we now tab over the top of the backer with fiberglass after they are glued so they can never come apart.  You can send all the pieces to me and I can reattach it and glass it up and send it back.  If you are just going to reglue it, use something 2 part like JB Weld and just snug the nut lightly on the backer bracket when installing.

Now that is service! Great job Carey.

@550aus posted:

If not, I'd be more inclined to use something like sikaflex, which is a lot stronger than silicone and won't get brittle over time like silicone

Wow, 71 trips around the sun and this is the first I hear of Sikaflex. And twice in one week!

The seal on the end caps of my 25 year old RV is showing its age, so I reached out to Newmar to see what they recommend. Sikaflex 505UV. Specifically for outdoor use.

Personally, I’d use 3M Weatherstrip Adhesive aka Monkey Snot, but it sounds like Carey has a better option.  

In related news: over the winter my Accuride aluminum wheels got some water spotting. I tried a couple of solutions I thought might work and none were satisfactory. The best was Gibbs Brand and a non-scratching scouring pad,  (blue Scotchbrite) but it took a lot of elbow grease. Someone on the iRV forum recommended this, and it looks like just the thing for you guys with polished Vintage 190s or Rudge repros (if they’re not clear coated)

I’m going to give it a shot and then (hopefully) maintain the finish with Gibbs Brand.

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