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Re: Steering wheel

To: Radialman@aol.com, tigers@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Steering wheel
From: BlueGolfer@aol.com
Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2001 08:42:40 EDT
In a message dated 8/14/01 1:44:32 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
Radialman@aol.com writes:

> Hey guys, I took off the grip dealo off my steering wheel to get at the 
> original wood, but when I did...to my surprize...it was covered with rubber 
> tubing over a steel tube that gives the wheel it strength...
>  
>  RATS!!!!!!
>  
>  I wanted to drive with that wood...what can I do?
Make your own wooden wheel using the steel core as a replacement.
Find someone with a chop saw. Buy some mahogany or black walnut and rip it to 
about 5 inches wide and make a ring the appropriate diameter using about 6 
segments.  Each cut would have to be 60 degrees.  Glue the segments together 
(do this twice for the top and bottom). A cloth strap clamp available at Home 
Depot works well for this.  Once dry (overnight) use a router to route a 
groove in the center of the segments at the exact diameter to accept the 
steel ring. The best way to route this groove is with a circle jig.  (You 
basically fix a router to a piece of plywood and offset a nail in a hole to 
rotate the router, or you can buy a ready made circle jig from Sears or other 
wood working suppliers).  Do this to one side of the top and bottom pieces. 
Then cut the outside to rough curves with a saw (hand saw, band saw or saber 
saw).  Use a round over bit to round the sides.  With a small chisel, waste 
openings for the spokes of the wheel in the appropriate places.  Glue the two 
halves together with polyethylene glue (or resoucinol - both are water 
proof.)  Sand and finsh to taste, including carving finger mounds if desired.

If you want to get fancy, make a compund miter cut to provide more surface 
area for the cut, that's what the factory did.  Also, my Tiger had a black 
plastic ring inlaid in the wheel along the circumferential direction.  The 
way to do this is to use a straight bit in the router and route a shallow 
groove using the circle jig.  Do this before assembly.  Then use veneer, 
plastruct model plastic or tinted expoxy to fill the groove.  Alternately, 
you could embelish the wood with round holes like Ferrari steering wheels.  
BTW, I'd make the steering wheel a little thicker than the factory did.  
While the skinny wheel is a vintage feel, it doesn't feel as meaty as todays 
wheels.

Its really only a weekend project.
I did this to my wheel, except I used many of the factory pieces and only 
replaced a few broken ones. But the concept was the same.

Rob Kempinski
Melbourne Fl

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