That's right! Here are some more pics taken yesterday, (my camera died while loading them onto my computer).holler wrote:What's even more amazing is how small the actual guts of that siren are.




It was a pre-existing condition. I imagine the company that did the removal set it on its side, which put that hole in the stator housing as well as the crack in the intake. Luckily it's an easy fix!! These fiberglass castings are so crude that a sloppy fix with some resin and mat will be all I need!Sirenguy02 wrote:Was that gash there when you got it? Or did it happen while loading?
I LOVE fiberglass work! I made a fiberglass/MDF subwoofer enclosure for my '73 VW Bug to go under the back window.kx250rider wrote:The fiberglass work is fun, once you get to be good at it (I'm OK at it, but not good). I learned a little of it from a friend who was restoring the body on a '58 Corvette. If it's brittle, you might think about laying a fiberglass skin over the whole shroud. It might prevent future cracks and stop it from "fuzzing out".
BTW: Where's the rest of that '80s Honda 110 three-wheeler? I see the tank.
Charles
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