Update and questions:
- Strut rods - Soaked in evaporust and fully stripped. Didn't find any paint marks on them.
- Spindles - Tried putting paint stripper on the blue / black metal flake and it did NOT bubble. Based on this it looks like typical oil quenching deposits as Jeff and Bob suggested. Also, fully cleaned the drivers side spindle and found mostly pink paint marks all over, with a couple bits of red and blue. Possibly some white, but that may just be faded pink. See pics.
- Springs - evaporusted to get marks, then bead blasted, gun blued, neutralized in a water / baking soda bath, and gave a light coat of Diamond clear. I used the Birchwood-Casey "Super Blue" instead of the regular "Perma Blue". The result is more black than blue. I also read on a gun site about neutralizing in a baking soda bath since the gun blue is acidic, so tried it. My first go round I blued one spring with the "Perma Blue" outside on a humid day and it flash rusted all over in about 5 minutes. I restripped then blued both using the "Super Blue" in my air conditioned basement and had no more flash rusting problems, even after the baking soda bath. I don't know if the difference was the different product or the low humidity, but I'd guess the latter.
Questions:
1) Should I go with a red stripe on the springs as indicated by the '65 TSB you mentioned Jeff, or make it match what I originally found which is a rose color (see pics I originally posted)? Do these typically fade that much?
2) Any input on the colors and marks on my spindles? Look typical for my plant, time, & car?
Thanks,
Rich