I spent considerable time with the emergency brake bracket again to re-thread one of the three (welded in nuts, if you will, that is part of the bracket) holes that hold the fastener bolts, that help attach the driver's side inner fender to the front firewall
Painted it again black cause of marking it up with holding it with vice grips or clamps or an inexpensive vice that really is rather useless.
Primed and painted the c shaped emergency brake thick rod piece.
Never use acetone on non metallic objects Acetone is a solvent for ALL organic molecules It is used for rinsing out all equipment before sensitive organic experiments for a reason Acetone is the reason your old timey screwdriver handles slowly keep getting gummy and melting and sticky Acetone is the only molecule that starts to permanently unravel the cross linking in many plastics It’s the best way to screw up a material if you don’t know anything about it and only have one shot and messing up I hope it didn’t mess up your job But that’s super risky Acetone is a no no on plastics It comes in a metal can for a reason That one and “gun wash” are super bad for plastics Isopropyl Alcohol would have been a much more appropriate solvent in this case Able to lift all oils and dry the surface while not damaging the plastic
If you haven’t proceeded yet to the next step I strongly suggest you hard bake the surfaces that have been exposed to acetone to drive it all out
And wait a week to see if they survived The acetone residue will also not be compatible With any new paint you plan to use anyway -s
Sir, Got it! I will take your comment to never use acetone on non-metalic surfaces as factual. And I will proceed to bake out the residual using a hand propane. Thanks 2manytrucks.
I found the aluminum front motor mount cover with my parts stash & cleaned it up using solvent followed by the Dremel wire brush & 1/2 inch wide by 18 inch belt sander (see pics).
Sanded & painted the circular long hardware item that holds the two shift rods together, running beside the steering column that allow the three on the tree to operate/function (see pics).
Finally found the '52 'Burb's lock guide & spring for the emergency brake pedal mechanism. I took it apart summer 2012 (11 years ago). I cleaned those items up. (see pics)
Cleaned up the bolts, washers & nuts for the front motor mount (see pics).
I went & fetched a 6,000 lb Heavy Duty Industrial Hoist from a mentor fellow (Mr. Charlie). I will be placing a '56 235 Stovebolt engine into the '52 Burb next month.
I now have completely assembled the '52 'Burb Carryall's emergency brake apparatus with the exception of buying the rubber boot/steel item(s) that mount on the floor, and a new rubber pedal face.
I am ready to move on to more exciting accomplishments, like placing a powerplant in it's cradle.
By the way, getting that emergency brake apparatus cleaned, painted, and assembled is pretty involved. There are like 15 different pieces to the assembly & that is not including cleaning up or purchasing fasteners. And that is only counting from the long rod forward and not cables or components inside the rear wheels where the shoes are located.