That looks great!I used the stencil from Graphic Express.
https://graphic-express.com/product...hood-paint-stencil-kit?variant=31404200820835
I did end up shifting it a tad wider to match the dimensions provided by David in this thread below:
https://7173mustangs.com/threads/measurments-for-hood-black-out.32908/#comment-338133
It worked out well for me and I am pleased with the result.
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Mine as well - apparently, the painter couldn't read the directions, and had put it on 2" back without the 1" trim being in-place, as well as too far to the passenger side (by almost 3/4") with one of the included straight pieces running off toward an A-pillar, instead of parallel with the hood's side edges (freaken amateur night!). Rather than remove it and throw away another $35, I wound up cutting into the stencil on the driver-side and hand-masking it myself, to duplicate the passenger-side error... which wound up being pretty close (with the exception of being 3" set-back from the front). If that wasn't weird enough, the painter had painted the hood black, and use the stencil as a mirror image on where to mask-off, and painted the entire car with the TuTone masked off - bassackwards - rather than painting the car first and using the stencil as intended.I would agree Chris. Yours looks very good and yes, use it as a guide.
When I had mine painted and I've said this many times, I screwed up and told my painter 2" (purists will say 1 7/8") from the front of the hood edge, forgetting the 1" trim was not yet on. So, mine is like too many we see and the front edge is now 3" back. However, that has never been called out at shows. I did however retain the width that Graphics Express's stencil gives. Personally, it has better proportions than the Ford layout.
Wow, I think that painter needs GLASSES!! How the F, do you F that up that much. But as you say, you got it looking pretty damn good in the end, but is that gloss black or just the way it looks in the pic?Mine as well - apparently, the painter couldn't read the directions, and had put it on 2" back without the 1" trim being in-place, as well as too far to the passenger side (by almost 3/4") with one of the included straight pieces running off toward an A-pillar, instead of parallel with the hood's side edges (freaken amateur night!). Rather than remove it and throw away another $35, I wound up cutting into the stencil on the driver-side and hand-masking it myself, to duplicate the passenger-side error... which wound up being pretty close (with the exception of being 3" set-back from the front). If that wasn't weird enough, the painter had painted the hood black, and use the stencil as a mirror image on where to mask-off, and painted the entire car with the TuTone masked off - bassackwards - rather than painting the car first and using the stencil as intended.
I'm just happy it came out as well as it did. Even though it's technically wrong, it's not nearly as wrong as so many others we see in auctions trying to pass-off as original paint.
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This is what it looks like when it's too far back. Don't let this happen to you - put the leading edge trim piece on and then measure before sticking down the stencil.
Thanks! I went glossy because I wanted to be able to wax it without messing up the finish, as well as not turning chalky in the West Texas sun over time.Wow, I think that painter needs GLASSES!! How the F, do you F that up that much. But as you say, you got it looking pretty damn good in the end, but is that gloss black or just the way it looks in the pic?
Again, personally I don't really mind it being back that extra inch as long as it's not passed off as being correct.
Yes indeed. Actually, that is a very good example of what it OUGHT to be.Here's mine after I got it back from soda blasting,, and the soda didn't really do much to the rust. This was factory painted. Hopefully, you can see the difference on how far forward it's supposed to be.
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That's looking pretty good my friend. If YOU like the gloss black-out, why not.Thanks! I went glossy because I wanted to be able to wax it without messing up the finish, as well as not turning chalky in the West Texas sun over time.
I'd actually thought about doing hockey stripes as well (since mine was missing so many pieces of the rocker bright trim), but decided against that after seeing so many cars with stripes & spoilers (regardless of whether or not they had them before). I decided that since mine was an original "no stripes/no spoilers" car (with Ram Air), that I would go back to how it came from the factory. I could literally toss my pizza cutters and sport caps back on and it would 'appear' pretty much as it came from the factory (although I still need to paint the urethane bumper and put it back on).
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Here are some measurements I took from my factory all original paint Tu Tone hood 1973 convertible
I painted my own hood and used the stencil from Graphic Express. Happy with it.Who makes the most accurate ram air stencil?
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