Restauración A2
Moderators: rickf, raymond, Mr. Recovery
Re: Restauración A2
Very nice, but paint those pioneer tools!
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Re: Restauración A2
Yes that's it
m3a1 ... I don't understand, pioneer tools! I do not know what you mean
Re: Restauración A2
The axe and the shovel. Over here they are called pioneer tools.
1964 M151A1
1984 M1008
1967 M416
04/1952 M100
12/1952 M100- Departed
AN/TSQ-114A Trailblazer- Gone
1984 M1008
1967 M416
04/1952 M100
12/1952 M100- Departed
AN/TSQ-114A Trailblazer- Gone
Re: Restauración A2
AAhh ok ok! how strange to call them like that heh at least for me!
In that case ... My pioneering tools are already painted. I have painted them black and the handle varnished, perhaps I should have used a darker varnish for the wood to look older.
In that case ... My pioneering tools are already painted. I have painted them black and the handle varnished, perhaps I should have used a darker varnish for the wood to look older.
Re: Restauración A2
Just having some fun with you! Make it your own...the way YOU like it. That's what it's all about.
Cheers,
TJ
Cheers,
TJ
Re: Restauración A2
On my A2, the ax/shovel were painted black, the guy I bought it from, said he got the mutt direct from the USMC
mark
1968 m274A5
1960 m151
1981 m151A2
1964 m416
1971 m416
1968 m274A5
1960 m151
1981 m151A2
1964 m416
1971 m416
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2037
- Joined: February 19th, 2013, 11:38 pm
- Location: Mansfield, PA
- Contact:
Re: Restauración A2
For the sake of conversation: The muffler heat shield was brought up in this post. As we sell parts, on occasion I get asked about what color the heat shield was from the factory. While I don't know for certain, I have a hard time believing that the production line would have taken the time to paint the heat shield a high temp silver. This is a picture of my 1968 A1. It looks like the original paint is still on some of the shield. And, it appears to be the same as the rest of the truck.
Guy
Guy
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M151 Body Panels - http://www.m151bodypanels.com/
'68 A1 - Under full resto
'68 A1 - Under full resto
Re: Restauración A2
I can confirm, the heat shield is painted with like the rest of the body. (my 151 has never been in civilian hands..)
Horst
1972 USMC M151A2 w/ROPS (ex Barstow) and M416
1962 M201 and trailer
1966 GTO,1982 E350 Skoolie, 1987 SJ413, 1987 911
Gone: 2xM35A2c, Unimog 404S, Hanomag AL28, DKW Munga
1972 USMC M151A2 w/ROPS (ex Barstow) and M416
1962 M201 and trailer
1966 GTO,1982 E350 Skoolie, 1987 SJ413, 1987 911
Gone: 2xM35A2c, Unimog 404S, Hanomag AL28, DKW Munga
Re: Restauración A2
I've painted mine in black, but an insulator is supposed to be missing between this part and the car floor to prevent the area between the seats from getting hot.
Re: Restauración A2
there is no insulator between the heat shield and the body. Nobody will stop you from putting one there but it is certainly not needed
Horst
1972 USMC M151A2 w/ROPS (ex Barstow) and M416
1962 M201 and trailer
1966 GTO,1982 E350 Skoolie, 1987 SJ413, 1987 911
Gone: 2xM35A2c, Unimog 404S, Hanomag AL28, DKW Munga
1972 USMC M151A2 w/ROPS (ex Barstow) and M416
1962 M201 and trailer
1966 GTO,1982 E350 Skoolie, 1987 SJ413, 1987 911
Gone: 2xM35A2c, Unimog 404S, Hanomag AL28, DKW Munga
Re: Restauración A2
I know on my A1 and the body I got with it they were both silver and both straight out of the military. Maybe things changed with the A2? You say you get no heat on the floor so something had to change.
1964 M151A1
1984 M1008
1967 M416
04/1952 M100
12/1952 M100- Departed
AN/TSQ-114A Trailblazer- Gone
1984 M1008
1967 M416
04/1952 M100
12/1952 M100- Departed
AN/TSQ-114A Trailblazer- Gone
Re: Restauración A2
No heat on the floor for my 151, A2, not much, I'll check again tomorrow(it was a long time ago)
Last edited by Mark on March 26th, 2021, 9:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
mark
1968 m274A5
1960 m151
1981 m151A2
1964 m416
1971 m416
1968 m274A5
1960 m151
1981 m151A2
1964 m416
1971 m416
-
- Brigadier General
- Posts: 2037
- Joined: February 19th, 2013, 11:38 pm
- Location: Mansfield, PA
- Contact:
Re: Restauración A2
Floor on my A2 gets pretty warm.
Guy
Guy
M151 Body Panels - http://www.m151bodypanels.com/
'68 A1 - Under full resto
'68 A1 - Under full resto
Re: Restauración A2
That heat shield, painted, or unpainted does only one thing. It prevents the radiant heat from directly reaching the floorpan and promotes cooling by means of air passing over and around the shield to whisk away the heat. In short, the passing air is cooling the shield as it collects heat. Any coating on the heat shield that has a reflective quality improves its performance.
Yes, a certain amount of heat WILL reach the floor in any event, particularly with the kind of driving we civilians do, much of which is stop and go. Happily, there is little in that area that would be directly affected by a warmed floor pan.
But, unless your paint is changing color because of the heat, I daresay you'll be okay. Leave a MUTT out in the sun in Texas in the summertime. I guarantee you the floor pan will be just as hot, if not hotter than when you're running the engine.
But, if it bothers you, there are plenty of hot rod, street rod, race car products out there (Summit Racing Products would be a great place to begin)
https://www.summitracing.com/search/par ... =Ascending
but to be entirely fair, Summit certainly isn't the only game in town, so shop around.
Heat barriers are constructed with a thick foil on one side, with good, strong adhesive (which requires a clean surface) on the other and a lot of miraculous insulative and sound deadening stuff in between. Cuts to fit with a simple pair of scissors. I got some Thermo-tec (the cheap stuff) to line the interior of the roof of our drop top Mercedes (it being a small car to begin with it gets toasty really quick) and it made a substantial difference so yes, even the cheap stuff would do well on a MUTT.
We had used it extensively on a rail dragster we ran way back when, (when the engines were in the front, the drivers straddled the bell housing and differential and men died like REAL men).
Were you to lay some of that on the underside of the floor in the tunnel you would see especially good results and NOBODY would ever see it.
Cheers,
TJ
Yes, a certain amount of heat WILL reach the floor in any event, particularly with the kind of driving we civilians do, much of which is stop and go. Happily, there is little in that area that would be directly affected by a warmed floor pan.
But, unless your paint is changing color because of the heat, I daresay you'll be okay. Leave a MUTT out in the sun in Texas in the summertime. I guarantee you the floor pan will be just as hot, if not hotter than when you're running the engine.
But, if it bothers you, there are plenty of hot rod, street rod, race car products out there (Summit Racing Products would be a great place to begin)
https://www.summitracing.com/search/par ... =Ascending
but to be entirely fair, Summit certainly isn't the only game in town, so shop around.
Heat barriers are constructed with a thick foil on one side, with good, strong adhesive (which requires a clean surface) on the other and a lot of miraculous insulative and sound deadening stuff in between. Cuts to fit with a simple pair of scissors. I got some Thermo-tec (the cheap stuff) to line the interior of the roof of our drop top Mercedes (it being a small car to begin with it gets toasty really quick) and it made a substantial difference so yes, even the cheap stuff would do well on a MUTT.
We had used it extensively on a rail dragster we ran way back when, (when the engines were in the front, the drivers straddled the bell housing and differential and men died like REAL men).
Were you to lay some of that on the underside of the floor in the tunnel you would see especially good results and NOBODY would ever see it.
Cheers,
TJ
Re: Restauración A2
TJ ... this conversation has been a long time ago, but it was an issue I still had pending. This weekend I put an insulator in the area of the muffler of the exhaust pipe. I did not want to fill everything with silver insulation, I have only insulated the sheet that gets so hot and can burn anything you put there, and I have also put the heat diffuser.m3a1 wrote: ↑March 27th, 2021, 12:45 amThat heat shield, painted, or unpainted does only one thing. It prevents the radiant heat from directly reaching the floorpan and promotes cooling by means of air passing over and around the shield to whisk away the heat. In short, the passing air is cooling the shield as it collects heat. Any coating on the heat shield that has a reflective quality improves its performance.
Yes, a certain amount of heat WILL reach the floor in any event, particularly with the kind of driving we civilians do, much of which is stop and go. Happily, there is little in that area that would be directly affected by a warmed floor pan.
But, unless your paint is changing color because of the heat, I daresay you'll be okay. Leave a MUTT out in the sun in Texas in the summertime. I guarantee you the floor pan will be just as hot, if not hotter than when you're running the engine.
But, if it bothers you, there are plenty of hot rod, street rod, race car products out there (Summit Racing Products would be a great place to begin)
https://www.summitracing.com/search/par ... =Ascending
but to be entirely fair, Summit certainly isn't the only game in town, so shop around.
Heat barriers are constructed with a thick foil on one side, with good, strong adhesive (which requires a clean surface) on the other and a lot of miraculous insulative and sound deadening stuff in between. Cuts to fit with a simple pair of scissors. I got some Thermo-tec (the cheap stuff) to line the interior of the roof of our drop top Mercedes (it being a small car to begin with it gets toasty really quick) and it made a substantial difference so yes, even the cheap stuff would do well on a MUTT.
We had used it extensively on a rail dragster we ran way back when, (when the engines were in the front, the drivers straddled the bell housing and differential and men died like REAL men).
Were you to lay some of that on the underside of the floor in the tunnel you would see especially good results and NOBODY would ever see it.
Cheers,
TJ
I also leave it in case someone can use it as an idea ...
The insulator comes with an adhesive face, it is thin because it is only for temperature, it has an aluminum layer and a fiberglass layer, according to the specifications it holds 800º Centigrade ...
I have not tried it to see how hot it gets but if there is someone interested I can measure the temperature of the sheet after driving a few km.
Greetings to all
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