...........I'm with you. I think a lot of people either don't know that they can post them larger or just don't take the step to do it.
Computer monitors and really any screen can fool you on colors But it’s damn close View attachment 4562930 At least a close enough start to get a paint guy to match it. Carousel red or hugger orange. (Which was a cheap fleet color as well as orbit orange.) the Pontiac and Chevy is the same paint, however the ground coat colors may be different and that will change the color. If you sprayed it over red oxide and light gray you’ll have 2 different shades for shure. I have no idea what the military would have be painting orange back then,,, however the internet scuttle is that pratt&lambert supplied the Chevy plant with the Chevy orange engine paint - (it is very close to the judge color and hugger orange) (speculation,,,, and if P&L also supplied the military then a mixed shipment could have happened along with stranger things.) FYI - that color is relatively cheap in PPG’s delfleet essential. Look damn good too. I shot it over a white sealer with PPG’s recommendations for clear coat reduction.stunning
What I see on my screen is the shade I am chasing -- a reddish orange rather than bleached out orange peel orange you see the SBC in sometimes when in harsh sunlight. I will chase down the delfleet this week after I receive printed photos of the car that are suppose to be as close as possible. Thanks for the advice. Jim
When you upload your photo just click on the Full Image box. Multiple photos you can just click on the Full Image box that shows at the top
This is just a little mans opinion, no one need get their panties all in a bunch and start a riot. BTW I've decided to change my Avatar more often. That's my brothers '30 model A PU. A real true traditional ride with 1957 283, three on the tree. Now, ………….a IMO little man voice. I think there is no more iconic grill and front end than the '33/'34 Ford. Never has been, never will be. This treatment on the Bell Coupe just turns me off and it always has since first seeing it back in the day. Believe me I know how much sweat went into this car and I DO appreciate that part. To each our own though.
... hey Larry, it's the ride height on extremely low 33/34 Fords that put their chin .. close enough to the ground to wad up very expensive & hard to find grilles. Alot of channeled, lowered 33/34's can't use the stock grilles. You'll see custom nose treatments or the ever popular, sectioned '32 grilles .. because they're easier. I'm sure without the low front, & the talents of Kenny Ellis .. maybe the nose would be different .. but then it wouldn't be the one of a kind Super Bell coupe.
Mine doesn't sit that low and I get what your saying though kidcampbell71. A track T nose like Pierson Bos. would have been looking good. I feel the same about using a Deuce shell on a '33/'34. I also know how against the grain I am with my opinion, what with the Bell Coupe running with the likes of the Cali. Kid and others of that bunch, which ain't no bad thing bro.
One has gotta make up their mind because they can’t have both. A lowered and channeled 33,34 can not run a 33/34 grille. I kinda like that 33/34 grill so I personally would plan the lowering around running the grill and keeping it off the pavement let alone planting it well below the pavement. Around here guys will sing high high praises for a radical lower and channel job/stance on these then with the same mouth say something derogatory about the 33/34 grill missing. Duh!!!!!!!!!!!! The only other asinine thing that can be done is to lay the grill way way way back and that looks stupid. Some guys manage to section a little bit successfully but it’s just a little before it also looks like ass. The 35 grill looks pretty good on the right car.
I always thought the coupe was HUGGER ORANGE, a factory color on my '69 Camaro. I especially liked it because it wasn't metallic.
Jim shook them up with his coupe at that time, think back to the time when it was built, the majority of the cars being built were nose bleed high, tires hang out from under the fenders, wire wheeled Resto Rods, Jim built himself a hot rod! I thought that grille/nose on his coupe was bad to the bone, I still do and obviously the OP of this thread thinks so too. I also like Jakes old coupe.HRP
Perhaps Frank can splash a dollop of that paint on a card and mail it to you so you can have your local paint guy digitally scan it and mix a batch for you? Though, consider that paint matched to what might be slightly faded roof panel may be a shade lighter than when the car was first sprayed... Another thought is (if he still has it), just maybe Weedburner's sheet metal brake has a somewhat untouched/unfaded spot on it's underside that could provide a small chip of the actual paint for the record? Many a car restoration has been paint matched from the only sliver of original paint left from a trunk jamb shaving, etc.