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They would have been a dark heat treated bare steel finish. Plenty of articles and threads on how to reproduce this look/finish on the site
Just to show variation on the sway bar finish ,the vast majority of 65/66 GT350 sway bars I have seen on survivor cars appear to be un painted dark heat treated spring steel.
Shelby was not building concourse grade cars and from several people that did get a look-see while 65-66 GT-350's were being built said that almost anything went. You can see inconsistencies in a lot of areas that were not part of the as delivered car. It's what makes a 65-66 Shelby unique.Jim
I think that often the "anything went" has its limitations and often owners and restorers have used it as an excuse or to make other choices. Guess that is where the "almost" comes into play. In this example I doubt that Shelby had people painting the sway bars and instead used what was delivered to them so that would create some limitations. Heard one "anything goes" urban legend years ago where the person making the comment suggested that 65 Shelbys were assembled with 6 cylinders from San Jose But of course we're getting off thread
Yes it was originally semi-gloss black. Not sure what I was thinking of at the time or why I made that mistake. No excuses - just happy it can be corrected.
When I restored the '65 SJ hipo convertible, I couldn't find any paint on the sway bar and it is finished as dark heat-treated appearance now.
Jeff, are you sure this is an all or none kind of thing? Same with coil springs... everyone thought black paint...