The Jennison Restoration.
Posted: Sun Jun 16, 2013 8:44 pm
A couple of weeks ago Linda, Joshua and I went to Canberra to pick up the latest edition to Australias Caravan Museum.
It is a 1960/61 Jennison Pathfinder 17 foot with shower and Jones dolly wheel.
I havnt done a real lot with it over the last couple of weeks other than give it a clean out, take a lot of photos and write a list of things to be done and any special items needed.
I had a spare hour or so yesterday so I removed the 3 badly corroded Jennison Pathfinder logos.
I also removed this very brittle laminate plaque for the Caravan Manufactures Association.
I put the aluminium cast badges into my sandblasting cabinet and it took about an hour to clean all six of the up.
The badges are actually sand or rough cast and then the lettering is "highlighted" by milling the top of the text to make it smooth which also makes it stand out more.
But since the badges have been corroded as well as sandblasted the smoothness of the text had gone, so to rectify this I could have milled the badges but this would have removed more material from the badges. So instead I used a flat piece of granite and wet it to hold a sheet 1200 of wet and dry sandpaper, I then placed the face side on the sandpaper and rubbed which in turn polished the text. I then finished of with a sheet of 2000 to make it even smoother.
The text after about 2 minutes of rubbing.
The first finished pair.
The three finished badges. Iam not sure if the bottom two were more corroded or if I just got sick of sanding them, as the text is not quite as polished.
It is a 1960/61 Jennison Pathfinder 17 foot with shower and Jones dolly wheel.
I havnt done a real lot with it over the last couple of weeks other than give it a clean out, take a lot of photos and write a list of things to be done and any special items needed.
I had a spare hour or so yesterday so I removed the 3 badly corroded Jennison Pathfinder logos.
I also removed this very brittle laminate plaque for the Caravan Manufactures Association.
I put the aluminium cast badges into my sandblasting cabinet and it took about an hour to clean all six of the up.
The badges are actually sand or rough cast and then the lettering is "highlighted" by milling the top of the text to make it smooth which also makes it stand out more.
But since the badges have been corroded as well as sandblasted the smoothness of the text had gone, so to rectify this I could have milled the badges but this would have removed more material from the badges. So instead I used a flat piece of granite and wet it to hold a sheet 1200 of wet and dry sandpaper, I then placed the face side on the sandpaper and rubbed which in turn polished the text. I then finished of with a sheet of 2000 to make it even smoother.
The text after about 2 minutes of rubbing.
The first finished pair.
The three finished badges. Iam not sure if the bottom two were more corroded or if I just got sick of sanding them, as the text is not quite as polished.