Re: [AMC-list] Glass rubber for late 60s American (was: Got a cool kid)
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Re: [AMC-list] Glass rubber for late 60s American (was: Got a cool kid)



Frank, Not sure what you have against urethane?
Yes it will make a possible later replacement tougher, but will seal and hold the gasket flush to the body.
   I'm not talking any old urethane. It has to be specifically designed for use with the gasket windows.  

   When I put my rear glass in I did not have cash for a rear rubber, plus it may not have even been available at that time. The rubber on the 69 sedan is black rubber, not chrome. The rubber also had a curl at the corners, which are rounded. Using the urethane I got from glass shop for gasketed windows, the urethane bridged that gap, is invisible as it dries to look like rubber. It is probably 12 years since it was installed and the rubber still sits tight to the body, there are no leaks.

  While there may be diffculties in replacement should that time ever arrive, I will take a dry interior over something that may never need done.

  I spent many years trying to seal these windows at Tewell's and the sealers of that time where a total nightmare, slimy glue that never fully cured or bonded. No thanks.

  I will also acknowledge there are probably better sealers out there now. In 1999 I went with Urethane on the back glass and have zero regrets.

Before I knew about the Urethane...The NOT recommended procedure was done.

  I used black 3M Marine grade RTV on the front windshield, horror of horrors. Set the glass in the rubber with it, installed the glass in the body with it, Masked the frame area and then fill the gap between the channels and gasket and set the chrome in the RTV. NO CLIPS for the trim and it is not the narrow trim that goes in the rubber either.

  Also 12 years old and not a drop of leakage. I WOULD NOT repeat the RTV job...but at the time I did it I thought it to be a good idea....



Mark Price
Morgantown, WV 26508
1969 AMC Rambler, 4.0L, EFI, T-5
2004 Grand Cherokee Laredo, 4.7L, Quadratrac II
"I realize that death is inevitable.
I just don't want to be around when it happens!"

----- Original Message -----

> From: "Frank Swygert" <farna@xxxxxxx>
> To: amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Sent: Sunday, February 6, 2011 12:03:19 PM
> Subject: Re: [AMC-list] Glass rubber for late 60s American (was: Got a cool	kid)
> 
> Contact Peter Stathes (www.amcrambler.com) about the rear glass
> rubber. There may not be a one-piece repro made. If not there is a
> piece that can be miter cut in the corners and used. Just remember to
> cut the rubber pieces about 1/8" long and glue the ends together with
> contact cement. The small grocery store multi-purpose adhesive tubes
> is fine. If the directions say to lightly coat both surfaces then wait
> a few minutes for them to dry before sticking together you have the
> right stuff. I glue the corners as I put the gasket on the window. Had
> to do the side windows of the wagon like that.
> 
> The windshield rubber is the inner lip-seal type. There is a raised
> flange that the gasket slides against with a lip on the gasket that
> goes over the flange. I usually run a thin but strong cord (NOT
> fishing line -- too thin and can cut the lip -- parachute cord works
> well) in the lip channel around the top, sides, and about 12-18"
> around the bottom sides. Then I put set the gasket in place on the
> bottom with the lip over the flange and work a few inches at a time up
> each side, pulling the cord out to flip the lip of the gasket over the
> flange while pushing in ans seating the gasket. Takes some time, but
> not too difficult.
> 
> The secret to getting one of these to seal is to use windshield
> sealant (not silicone or urethane!) in the channel that the glass sits
> in AND on the body where the gasket sits (the outside edge of the
> gasket, not against the flange). Glass shops currently don't do either
> -- they use no sealant -- and the windshield WILL leak in a hard rain.
> I had mine professionally installed then had to push it out a couple
> months later and install correctly. The main reason shops don't use
> sealant is because these old cars usually aren't driven in foul
> weather. Another reason given is that the windshield may not pop out
> in a wreck. It's not really supposed to, but the theory is that it
> will without sealant and somehow that's safer. If you're not wearing a
> seat belt having the windshield keep you in the car sounds a bit safer
> than getting hurled out to me. I know there will be some cutting, but
> more likely to survive that than hurled out.
> 
> The TSM mentions the sealer around the outside of the gasket, but not
> in the channel the glass sits in. A thin bead of sealer in that
> channel definitely helps though. The TSM also mentions a handy way to
> clean up any sealer. It says to use a "waterless hand soap" (Gojo,
> etc.) film on painted surfaces that might get sealer on them. Then you
> just wipe off the sealer and hand cleaner with a cloth when done.
> 
> ------------
> Date: Sat, 5 Feb 2011 16:08:48 -0500
> From: Bruce Griffis<bruce.griffis@xxxxxxxxx>
> 
> My oldest son got me a snazzy new windshield gasket for Christmas.
> Way
> cool! Found out today he ordered front and rear door seals, window
> sweep sets and new a trunk gasket. I've got good condition used
> windlace to replace what I have. Can't find anyone with a rear window
> gasket. But wow! That is really cool! I'm looking forward to sealing
> up that Rambler! I had planned to replace the carpet and take care of
> some interior items once the car is sealed. Looks like that can
> happen
> sooner rather than later!
> 
> Very happy. Really looking forward to stopping the leaks, making sure
> it didn't start to rust, and replacing the carpet and trunk mat.
> Hopefully it will be a dry Rambler in a few weeks!
> 
> 
> -- 
> Frank Swygert
> Publisher, "American Motors Cars"
> Magazine (AMC)
> For all AMC enthusiasts
> http://www.amc-mag.com
> (free download available!)
> 
> 
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