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Wondering what the correct finishes should be on the starter motor. This is one from West Coast Classic Cougar, but I believe the whole starter was painted after it was assembled, except the nose? Looking for a correct photo as I have not been able to find one.Also on the WCCC site they do not recommend the concourse solenoid fondly referred to as a POS. Has anyone had luck with another product or are originals the way to go. While correctness is great I do want my car to run and drive and be reliable and drivable. No point in having a perfectly correct car that does not drive or run well imo. Call me crazy!
You do not want to copy that starter . It has all of the features of a typical auto parts store after market starter. Keep searching.
This is one from the 428 CJ website. Not sure if there is any difference between the 390 & 428 visually or otherwise.
That is a better example but still not detailed correctly. Gasket should be under bendix cover and band clamp. There was typically faint black overspray on the nose cone instead of a defined cut line between the nose cone and the center barrel section as in the picture. If you compare the two pictures you posted you can see some other things that are different between the autoparts store starter and the CJ website one. The CJ website starter is more correct. Stamped engineering number on the 68 and up starters hard to come up with . Fortunately for you the 390 starter is easier to come up with compared to the ultra rare CJ version.
Wondering what the correct finishes should be on the starter motor. This is one from West Coast Classic Cougar, but I believe the whole starter was painted after it was assembled, except the nose? Looking for a correct photo as I have not been able to find one.
Also on the WCCC site they do not recommend the concourse solenoid fondly referred to as a POS. Has anyone had luck with another product or are originals the way to go. While correctness is great I do want my car to run and drive and be reliable and drivable. No point in having a perfectly correct car that does not drive or run well imo. Call me crazy!
If you had an earlier built 68 you could possibly get by with a none stamped in metal version used on earlier cars These threads basically cover the standard finishing of a starter or have links to other threads https://www.concoursmustang.com/forum/index.php?topic=16850.msg105575#msg105575Long thread on the subjecthttps://www.concoursmustang.com/forum/index.php?topic=14375.0Originals if you can find one in decent condition may be the way to go though in a fresh bright engine compartment few other than NOS are going to not stand out as used. Anyone try and plate the mounting bracket while it is still connected to the case? Something I've not had a chance to tryEarlier threads on the C7 solenoids https://www.concoursmustang.com/forum/index.php?topic=23940.msg149157#msg149157https://www.concoursmustang.com/forum/index.php?topic=11450.msg68641#msg68641Thread discussing rebuild themhttps://www.concoursmustang.com/forum/index.php?topic=12055.15
Regarding the starter solenoid, the troublesome unit is the one from AMK. There is another one on the market now from Alloy Metal Products and I think it functions properly. I know Virginia Classic Mustang sells the AMP version and others might as well but confirm which one it is when ordering.
Nether of those are correct. It should have a C7 number and Autolite stamping.
Thanks Jef that is great information. Unfortunate that they go through the trouble to make parts look concours correct, but in some cases the emphasis seems to be on look more than fit or function. I have a new reproduction as well as the unit that was in my car when I purchased it. It is definitely an older unit, but not sure if it is original. I will take a photo of it, but as you pointed out, it would look out of place in my engine bay now, but it was fine when it was a driver lol
Understand and why I asked if anyone had tried plating the metal while still attached to the bakeolite. Have been able to polish the plastic like material on ones in decent shape its the plating that is often the concern. Will have to try plating one that way if someone does not beat me to it or has already tried.
I have plated some parts in a similar way with success. I did the bracket on my brake distribution valve that way and a few other things. Bob Gains recommended electrical tape to keep the plating off the part you don't want plated and it worked well. I can try plating the old solenoid brackets I have and post the results. The tough part is keeping the unwanted media and plating solution from getting inside the part. Standby for the results. I take it that the plating finish should be clear zinc and not zinc dichromate like the old one I have