quote:
Originally posted by tuultyme
I am planning on replacing the original glass guides with the "felt" guides (received via Ray Paul/Bud's Benz). Currently my guides are still pretty much on the window. Does anyone know what to use to loosen the adhesive to remove them; I do not want to use any mechanic method to avoid breaking the glass. Ray Paul said to glue the "felt" guides, top and bottom, what type of adhesive would work?
Bruce; 268Blaugrun(green) 1970 280SL; IL
Bud's kit is simply welting that is/was used on all old cars of the 40's as felted tracking that the glass rides up on. You can see this stuff on old cars where the glass on the door is fully framed: the welting provides the smooth bearing surface in which the glass rides. There's no magic to Bud's kit, which is simply 4 pieces of this stuff. I believe the stuff is actually called "window felt" and somebody must make the stuff and sell it by the foot. For those that have not seen it, it is a combination of metal, rubber and felt.
I got the Bud's kit and am not exactly happy with it. When the window is all the way up there is very little support of the glass, thus you can wobble it back and forth. This might be alleviated a bit if you very carefully compress the welting to form a firm fit on the glass.
I used silicone rubber adhesive to glue the welting into the track. If you've had things apart you might find a lot of issues inside the door as I did with mine; all kinds of things needed cleaning and lubrication, the tracks needed de-rusting.
I have not been able to get the window re-adjusted properly. I can't close it with the glass all the way up as the top of the glass won't fit into rubber weatherstripping on the soft top. I have to have it down a bit before closing the door. If I adjust it a bit lower there's a "crack" at the front seal. I gave up for the moment, saving my pennies to take it to Gernold.
Another issue I found was the rattles--I thought it was the old clamps on the glass but this was not the case. In my case the rattles were only when the glass was all the way down, and it was the metal arms of the lifting mechanism hitting the bottom of the door; then telegraphing the vibrations througout the entire glass and door internals. I put some padding on the bottom of the door as a cushion. If I adjusted it so the bottom of the lifting mechanism doesn't hit the bottom of the door, the glass was not all the way down! Jeez!
I should have left it all alone! Needless to say I have not been in a rush to do the passenger side yet.
BTW my original clamps were firmly fixed to the glass but when loosened by the screw just came off with no persuasion. If yours are firmly stuck, these are not the source of your rattles and I'd think twice about what you are getting into!
The attached photo shows the welting glued into the two tracks, but before trimming.
Download Attachment: Door Internals Small.jpg84 KB
Michael Salemi
1969 280SL
Signal Red w/Black Leather
Restored