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Registered: 10/27/10
Posts: 20
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#165229 - 02/12/10 06:43 PM
Re: 6 cylinder engine gray
[Re: m006840]
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Registered: 01/08/02
Posts: 14894
Loc: West Allis,Wi.
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The same gray color was used on ALL Chevrolet engines from 1929-1952 (and some engines beyond that). The Charcoal is about as good as a description as you can find. If you want the correct "gray" for your 1951 you can get it from either the Filling Station or Chevs of the '40's. The "gas meter gray" was  JunkYardDog's term. I always called the B.H. paint "porch floor gray".....about the same thing.
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Chevgene
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#165239 - 02/12/10 08:22 PM
Re: 6 cylinder engine gray
[Re: Chev Nut]
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Registered: 12/03/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Sandwich, IL USA
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Yeah, that gray looks different in every light, sunlight, floresent, incandesent, flash, and now I'm using some LED's to light the way. When I first sprayed it it looked way to dark then you get it out in the sun and it changes. And of course cameras, monitors, and the program that you view it with are all going to be a bit different. But......it's 100% Filling Station Gray straight from the rattle can. And after listening to four years worth of this ones the right one, that ones the right one, yours is to light, yours is to dark, I know mine was the original color, and with a different opinion coming from just about everyone I've talked to......that's my choice and I'm sticken to it!
There was some of the original paint on a few of the other sheet metal parts, it was all very chalky so it's difficult to tell just exactlly what it was. Some of it that was on the pan and side cover was more of a charcoal gray, again it was faded. But when I average them all out they were close enough to The Filling Station shade that I'm never gonna argue about it again.
Denny Graham Sandwich, IL
Edited by Denny Graham (02/12/10 08:29 PM)
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#165255 - 02/13/10 06:52 AM
Re: 6 cylinder engine gray
[Re: Junkyard Dog]
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Registered: 12/03/06
Posts: 846
Loc: Sandwich, IL USA
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Yep Skip, about every group that I've followed in the last four years has had lengthy debates on this subject, this group included. I was involved in a thread on the Stovebolt a while back where the BH engine paint argument was going on and I decided to settle it in a comparative manner. Just showing one color tells you nothing because of the variables that I mentioned earlier, but when you put them side-by-side you can really see the difference. Of course that doesn't stop the guy that insists that his red/orange 216 is the original engine with the original color because it's been in the family for thirty-five years and his father said so. Some of these little details are very often difficult to prove. A few other examples that are often the subject of debate are the bed wood color, the sequence of how the vehicles were painted and assembled and the logo on the valve covers. It’s all I can do to try to sort out what was original to the Advance Design trucks which I’ve been concentrating on for the past four years. On the valve cover logos I’ve seen several different versions on original engines that still had remnants of the logo left on them. Some were solid letters, some had the stencil letters connected with bars, some were fuzzy around the edges and some had nice crisp edge definition. Since it’s always bugged me when I see the stickers that the vendors sell, I’ve made a few attempts at stencil painting them. Here is my latest attempt at the Thrift-Master logo, I think I’m gonna stick with this one. http://www.pbase.com/dennygraham/under_hood&page=12 . I had to have a couple dozen of the vinyl stencils made up to make them affordable so I guess that means I need to restore a couple dozen more 216’s before the vinyl stencils dry out. Another one is the bed floor, which I believe was always painted black from the factory, yet some people swear that their truck has been in the family since it was purchased and the floor was painted the same color as the truck when it was delivered. So maybe the salesman had the body shop paint the floor at the customers request. DG
Edited by Denny Graham (02/13/10 07:28 AM)
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#165401 - 02/14/10 06:09 PM
Re: 6 cylinder engine gray
[Re: m006840]
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Shade Tree Mechanic
Registered: 12/29/07
Posts: 163
Loc: Iowa
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For a relative newcomer to the world of VCCA and VCCA Chat I have always read with great interest the continuous discussion about the "real" engine grey.
The car I'm working on will never be a pefect car, but I am trying to maintain as much orignality as possible as I make the repairs and service to get it on the road again.
So last summer I ordered engine spray paint from Chev of the 40's. Boy was I surprised when the paint was in cans from Bill Hirsch. It is labeled Chev Blue Grey 29-52.
I called Chev of the 40's and they assured me it was the correct paint. I even called Hirsch and talked to a person there. She told me that they actually had multiple different engine grey colors to send to their different customers such as FS and CoF.
So the mystery remains, as least in my mind. I used the paint and it is a fairly dark grey.
Right now it is the least of my concerns as I try to find enough time to get the car going. My real hope is that someday maybe even this summer someone who knows the real color will see the car.
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Rusty
VCCA #44680
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#165414 - 02/14/10 08:09 PM
Re: 6 cylinder engine gray
[Re: Junkyard Dog]
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Registered: 12/14/01
Posts: 11879
Loc: Central Texas
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Dark gray, yep, I would even call it charcoal gray. Remember charcoal gray?
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Lone Star Region Chat Group Chapter member http://www.lsrclub.orgLife's a long winding trail, ride a good horse!
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