gbtr6 Posted September 22, 2020 Posted September 22, 2020 I got the Detail Master Mahogany bed it. Anyone use it and have any tips for install? As a side note, I went to the local smoke shop and they gave me some small pieces of fine thickness veneers for free. Could be good for woodies and such too. Thanks, Perry
Casey Posted September 22, 2020 Posted September 22, 2020 Which 1:1 pickup bed are you trying to replicate? The DM kit is generic, so look at detail images online of how the real bed planks and hold down strips (pe pieces in the DM kit) are used, then do the same in scale. I recall seeing some pickup beds with the hold down strips standing a bit proud of the wood planks, so you may not need to recess the strips much or at all.
SSNJim Posted September 22, 2020 Posted September 22, 2020 My question is when you took delivery of a brand spanking new 1953 Ford pickup, how was the bed finished? I can't imagine a bed for a working truck would be a show quality stained and polished wood bed with chrome strips. I'm thinking painted body color or black.
NOBLNG Posted September 23, 2020 Posted September 23, 2020 I’ve never done a real wood one. Try typing this in google. “site:modelcarsmag.com wooden bed”
Jim B Posted September 23, 2020 Posted September 23, 2020 As I understand it, the wood in the bed of a new truck in the 1940s &1950s (and maybe the 1960s) was coated with lamp black to preserve the wood. It would not have been polished & shiny.
SSNJim Posted September 23, 2020 Posted September 23, 2020 (edited) That's what I would have thought. I couldn't imagine it being how we think of a wood bed today. Thanks! Edited September 23, 2020 by SSNJim
BlackSheep214 Posted September 24, 2020 Posted September 24, 2020 Hmmm... interesting. I was going to replicate wood planks in a '53 F100 using thin balsa wood and stain them. My thought is measure each, cut out the plastic ones and somehow brace them and install the real wood on. Just haven't really nailed down my method yet. Time will tell.... I'll probably buy those stain pens and polyurethane spray to seal them in. I don't think they come in polyurethane pens.
Tom Geiger Posted September 24, 2020 Posted September 24, 2020 I fully agree that wood beds were painted black at the factory as these were work trucks and wood just happened to be the material used for beds. I got marked down once at a contest for accurately panting mine black once! But.. pickups have been customized and over restored with shiny wood beds for decades so people do like that look on collector vehicles. Same as the fact that very few cars back in the day had wide whitewall tires, but they’re all over shows today! As such, here’s two I’ve done. I don’t recommend cutting wood as it’s difficult to get multiple pieces to look tight in scale. I use a dry brush method to paint wood grain I learned from Irv Arter. It’s not difficult, with a little practice you can do this. I do have a pdf I am happy to send to anyone, PM me with an email address since I don’t think I can send pdf files through the PM system.
Tom Geiger Posted September 24, 2020 Posted September 24, 2020 FYI- Here’s my pickup with proper black painted bed. And here’s the truck built back when this kit came out. A judge told me i would’ve placed but didn’t because I painted bed black! People believed that! I gave up and filled the bed with wood!
Danno Posted September 24, 2020 Posted September 24, 2020 Tom and Jim are correct. One thing was consistent among early truck manufacturers: bed floors were utilitarian not beauty features. All were delivered in black, planks and hold-down strips alike. As Tom mentions, the trend of “over-restoring” 1:1 trucks — even purported ‘factory fresh’ builds has spread to the modeling world. I cringe any time I see an otherwise painstakingly restored pickup with dance floor finished wood bed and chrome strips. Never happened that way when they we new. Unfortunately, some scale builders google for reference and settle on over-restored examples to guide their “factory stock” models, not knowing any different. I’ve been on the flip side of Tom’s experience. Judged a very nice model lower than the builder expected and he couldn’t believe his beautifully executed, deeply urethaned real wood veneer bed with alcladed strips cost him the win. He argued. But later, he came to us and confessed he did serious research with the restorers club and discovered we were right. ?
Tom Geiger Posted September 24, 2020 Posted September 24, 2020 Thanks Dan! My favorite encounter with a judge was many years ago. I built a street rod with a VW chassis under it. I didn’t place in the contest at all. The judge sought me out to say they “disqualified” my car because I forgot to put a battery in it! Otherwise it would have won the Street Rod category. I still remember the look on his face when I responded, “It’s a Volkswagen, the battery is under the back seat!”
Paul Payne Posted October 5, 2020 Posted October 5, 2020 I have a bunch of cedar cigar wrappers that are very thin and can be cut into any size strips you want. Don't smoke cigars, scrounged them out of discarded tubes. Can't recommend a source except for a tobacco store or a friend who smokes cigars ( they smell like cedar- not cigar!) Someday I plan on planking the AMT runabout with these- yeah, one more project.....
gbtr6 Posted October 6, 2020 Author Posted October 6, 2020 (edited) I used the cigar box veneer. Just went in to the local shop and asked. Got them free. They are varying thickness from relatively thick to very thin. I'll take more pictures soon. I have the PE bedrails I need to install too. I know it's not supposed to be pretty, but I can't resist. Perry Edited October 6, 2020 by gbtr6
Vietnam Vet67 Posted October 6, 2020 Posted October 6, 2020 (edited) Edited October 6, 2020 by Vietnam Vet67 addition of info.
Shardik Posted October 12, 2020 Posted October 12, 2020 I made a wood bed for this one using coffee stirrers and styrene 'U' channel for the skid strips. Unfortunately, my only experience with wooden truck beds had been at car shows, so I ended up with the typical natural wood and chrome skid strips (albeit considerably weathered).
slusher Posted October 13, 2020 Posted October 13, 2020 On 9/23/2020 at 9:00 AM, Jim B said: As I understand it, the wood in the bed of a new truck in the 1940s &1950s (and maybe the 1960s) was coated with lamp black to preserve the wood. It would not have been polished & shiny. They are putting would beds in trucks that never had wood beds on car shows and trucks going thru Barrett-Jackson...
slusher Posted October 13, 2020 Posted October 13, 2020 On 9/24/2020 at 11:29 AM, Tom Geiger said: Thanks Dan! My favorite encounter with a judge was many years ago. I built a street rod with a VW chassis under it. I didn’t place in the contest at all. The judge sought me out to say they “disqualified” my car because I forgot to put a battery in it! Otherwise it would have won the Street Rod category. I still remember the look on his face when I responded, “It’s a Volkswagen, the battery is under the back seat!” That was really wrong...
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