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ECJ5 Time: Speedo Clock Directions!!

Discussion in 'Builds and Fabricators Forum' started by lynn, Aug 7, 2007.

  1. lynn

    lynn Time machine / Early CJ5 HR Rep Staff Member

    Here's some guidelines if anyone wants to make one of these clocks:

    What you need:

    CJ speedometer
    Sawsall or good hacksaw
    Files or dremmel with grinding stones
    Tin snips
    Hot glue gun
    Clockworks. Get at Michaels/Ben Franklin/AC Moore/any craft store. Get one for ¼” thick dial
    Flourescent orange spray paint
    Drill, 5/16 drill bit, 1/8” drill bit
    Screwdriver
    Red construction paper
    ¼” thick piece of rubber, (or wood, etc) about 1x1” or so
    5 or 6 flat toothpics

    How to do:

    Pry up edges of bezel, lift bezel/glass retainer off of unit. Clean glass, sand and paint bezel and retainer desired color (assuming chrome is shot)
    From the back, unscrew the nuts that hold the guts in place (odometer and gauges). Remove guts.
    Pry off needle, careful to not scratch the face.
    From the back, carefully drill the two rivets that hold the odometer in place with the 1/8 bit, do not drill through the face. Save the fronts of the rivets.
    Remove the entire odometer assembly, cardboard tubes, etc
    Note that all of this has to be removed so that the hands can clear the glass when all is assembled. Essentially the face will be moved well back into the case from the original location.

    Take off the frame and device that prevents you from moving the numbers. Once it’s free, take the odometer wheels to a copy machine, set them to whatever combination you want, and make a copy of the numbers.

    Drill out the center hole of the face to 5/16”
    Clean the face carefully.
    Put the odometer rivet front pieces back on the face, hot glue them in place from the back.

    Glue the odometer numbers copy to a piece of card stock. Cut it out, hold it behind the face until lined up, hot glue it in place. Remove the old cellophane from the idiot lights, glue in some small pieces of red construction paper.

    Remove the faces from the temp and fuel gage canisters, carefully clean them. If they are too bad, you can copy them on a copier, touch up the copies, then glue the copies over the original.

    Paint the toothpicks and the clock hands with fluorescent orange paint. 2 coats, both sides.

    Drill a ¼” hole in the center of the 1x1"x ¼” rubber, so it fits tightly over the clock stem. Hot glue it in place as a spacer between the works and the stem. Should be just enough stem to stick through the face and put the nut on to tighten.

    Using a sawsall or hacksaw, cut the hump off of the back of the speedometer case.

    Put the clock works behind the face and push stem through the center hole in the face. Tighten with nut provided in clockworks. Slip face into the case. Push it back until it bottoms on the two metal brackets that are inside the case. Note where the clockworks is too big to fit through the hole. Cut with tinsnips to allow the clock body to fully extend beyond the case. File or dremmel all rough edges, then paint entire case inside and out.

    Take the temp gage face, align it behind the appropriate hole. Hot glue the back of the gage face to the back of the clock face in one spot. Cut a painted toothpick. From the front, slip it inbetween the gage face and the clock face, pointing at normal operating temp. Carefully turn unit over, hot glue the other side of the gage face back into place. Put extra glue into the triangle holes on the gage face, that will hold the toothpick in place.
    Repeat for fuel gage.
    (Note I suggested painting 5 or 6 toothpicks because the ends are often different shape, and not obvious until after painting. Select two that match the best after painting)

    Holding the case in hand, slip the face/clockworks into the case, allowing it to rest on the two brackets, and making sure to have the extended portion of the gage faces aligned with the indentations in the case. Take one of the cardboard tubes, cut it about in half, so that it supports the bottom when placed between the clock face and the back of the case. Once it is cut to the required thickness, hot glue it inside the case, putting glue inside and out of the tube. This should be about bottom center inside the case, and essentially supporting behind the two gage faces. The two metal brackets support the rest of the unit. Be sure all is centered and level, then carefully turn the unit over, keeping it centered, and apply hot glue through the holes where you can access the metal brackets. The hot glue should make good contact with the back of the face and surround/encompass the brackets. When this cools, do the same for the cardboard tube support. Finally, apply hot glue around the clock body where it sticks out of the back of the case. The works and face should now be firm in the case.
    After this, apply the painted clock hands to the clock stem per the package directions.

    Install painted retainer/glass/bezel, crimp edges. Put some painted screws in the corners.

    I think that about covers it.... :)

    What time is it??
    Early CJ5 Time!!!
    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Aug 7, 2007
  2. mortten

    mortten I can’t put my finger on it 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Nice. But is the Jeep done?
     
  3. lynn

    lynn Time machine / Early CJ5 HR Rep Staff Member

    One project at a time... ;) R)
    These were on my plate before the LJ...
     
  4. panzer

    panzer Super Mod Staff Member

    Lynn, what the reason for the 91101?? On both speedo's.
     
  5. Boyink

    Boyink Super Moderator Staff Member

    We should grab this and put it in the tech section so it doesn't get pruned. I have a spare speedo that I'd like to do this to but it's gonna be a while...
     
  6. jeepfreak81

    jeepfreak81 When in Doubt, Pedal out!

    Why did you set the odometers to that.... I get the significance of the numbers, just curious though.

    Edit: Panzer beat me to it...
     
  7. Jeepman252

    Jeepman252 Sponsor

    I know, I know, I know....


    It's a tribute to 9-11-01, NYC.


    I'm I right lynn? what did I win????:)
     
  8. lynn

    lynn Time machine / Early CJ5 HR Rep Staff Member

    Indeed it is just a daily reminder to me of 9/11.

    Another ECJ5er had one made with his wife's birthday so he doesn't forget... :D

    Larry, good guess or good memory ... Here's a cold one for you!! :beer:

    I now have both of these clocks on my wall at work, one above the other :D
     
  9. pathkiller

    pathkiller Member

    How about 9-11-01, Shanksville, PA and Arlington, VA?
    Remember there were 3 disaster sites on that day, not just NYC.
     
  10. lynn

    lynn Time machine / Early CJ5 HR Rep Staff Member

    Of course... for all the disasters and all of the heroes that terrible day, I choose this method to remind myself.
     
  11. 64Jeeper

    64Jeeper I have Brakes!

    Good work Lynn! I know what I'm doing as soon as I find me a 0-9 speedometer. :)
     
  12. Jeepman252

    Jeepman252 Sponsor

    Yes, my bad, please remember all...:patriot:

    Thanks lynn, :flag:
     
  13. Chris Insull

    Chris Insull All roads lead me back to the beach... 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Now that is cool... mmm, now where'd I put my spare speedo(meter)?:rofl:
     
  14. w3srl

    w3srl All-around swell dude Staff Member

    Hmmm, I have a flatty speedo around here somewhere...
     
  15. Zak

    Zak Member

    Bringing this one back!

    Question for anyone who did this, I am looking to make a couple, is the clockworks battery operated or electric on the ones you did? If battery, how dificult is it to access the rear of the clockworks to change the battery??

    Thanks guys!
    Brian
     
  16. TexasBlues

    TexasBlues JEEP-Hockey-Holic

    i vote to sticky this...

    too cool!
     
  17. Zak

    Zak Member

    Anybody try this?
     
  18. lynn

    lynn Time machine / Early CJ5 HR Rep Staff Member

    I used battery operated, cheapie clockworks... got them at a craft-supply store (Michaels) for ~$7. They fit in the gaping hole you cut in the back. Easy to access the battery and hand-adjustment wheel.

    Here's the back of a '55 speedo clock I made for Duke... this one turned out nice (better than some of the earler ones I made)

    [​IMG]
     
  19. lynn

    lynn Time machine / Early CJ5 HR Rep Staff Member

    Here's a link to my album of the various Jeep-related clocks I've made, including one I did not make, another forum member here made it (the one in the wooden frame)

    http://lynn225.multiply.com/photos/album/57/lynn225_Speedometer_

    I have a few more in a box on the workbench to do, including a bogus '55 I'll make (later housing and glass with a '55 face)
    Too many projects :rofl:
     
  20. Zak

    Zak Member

    Thanks Lynn!