bottombracket
SILVER Star
I have used two-part epoxy to make my loose 62 wheel approximately 90% better.
There are two holes at approximately 10 o’clock and 2 o’clock on the back of the wheel.
I bought some epoxy (nothing special), 10 mL syringes, and two large 14 gauge needles. (I work in medicine so these were easy to procure).
I mixed the epoxy in 10 mL batches and injected it through the two mold holes on the back of the steering wheel, approximately 5 mL in each direction. It took a while to dry, but it definitely tacked the loose rubber back down to the metal frame. It’s not perfect, but I think it’s at least 90% better than it was. I’m sure if you made more poke holes in the back of the wheel you could get a better distribution of epoxy, but using the available holes worked well enough for me.
I don’t have any pictures because once I started mixing the epoxy, it made a mess and I had to move pretty quickly to get everything loaded into the syringes, and distributed evenly without gluing my hands to the wheel, the syringes, and the floor of my garage.
There are two holes at approximately 10 o’clock and 2 o’clock on the back of the wheel.
I bought some epoxy (nothing special), 10 mL syringes, and two large 14 gauge needles. (I work in medicine so these were easy to procure).
I mixed the epoxy in 10 mL batches and injected it through the two mold holes on the back of the steering wheel, approximately 5 mL in each direction. It took a while to dry, but it definitely tacked the loose rubber back down to the metal frame. It’s not perfect, but I think it’s at least 90% better than it was. I’m sure if you made more poke holes in the back of the wheel you could get a better distribution of epoxy, but using the available holes worked well enough for me.
I don’t have any pictures because once I started mixing the epoxy, it made a mess and I had to move pretty quickly to get everything loaded into the syringes, and distributed evenly without gluing my hands to the wheel, the syringes, and the floor of my garage.