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I started with a Mustang II V6 with automatic transmission and disassembled the car down to the drive line components that I needed. |
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Disk brake front suspension, motor and the power rack and pinion steering. |
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A short cut came to mind a Gazelle kit looks just like an Excalibur but too small. A few Modifications and I will have just what I need. After hand building a frame for the Mustang components I started fitting the body. A cut here and a cut there and there was not much left but I was on my way. |
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The rear end of the Gazelle did not look all that much like the Excalibur I was thinking of so I cut it off behind the doors and with plywood, fiberglass and Bondo a better looking rear half. |
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The new rear section looked good but now the door was a little too small. |
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The front half now looked like a Gazelle that was a little taller but did not look all that good. Note the the Mark II Continenal in the back ground |
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So I scraped the hood, grill and side panels and decided on a Mark II Continental grill. |
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I needed the Mark II Continental hood shape so I splashed a mold off of my 1972 Lincoln Continental. Got the perfect shape for the hood but destroyed the paint on the car when I pulled the mold, but the Royal Saber looked better. |
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A few cuts here and a few cuts there and the Gazelle kit was reduced to a 6" strip for the rear fenders another 6" strip of front fender and 3 pieces of the door were all that remained of the Gazelle kit. |
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Working on the details building the shapes for the front splash pan including the air horn mounts fitting and mounting the headlights and cross bar. |
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Shaping and putting the final finish on the body parts. |
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Expert painter Steve Burns doing all the final finish and body contour work |
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Finally finished primer |
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It is taking shape it now has real color on it. |
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More pieces finished... |
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Final fit and mounting holes for hardware |
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Running board prototypes in place |
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More details... |
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Windshield mount brackets, side pipes and side mount tires fitted |
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Front end detail. Front splash pan completed with air horn and fog light mounts determined. |
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Running board prototypes finished and fit. |
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Feels like a car, looks like a car but now we get to take it apart and start over. |
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The prototype was fabricated from fiberglass sheeting, plywood and a lot of Bondo. So now we take it all apart take each prototype body part and make a mold. Then we get to make a production part and start all over building the car detailing and painting. |
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Front fender with tooling gel coat applied. |
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First layer of fiberglass applied to the fender mold. |
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Main body mold consisting of 4 pieces; Top rear, top front, left and right sides. |
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Cracking the mold for the first time, success or disaster? This is where you find out if the 5 coats of wax and the parting agent were applied properly or did you miss a spot in which case you can end up with a solid lump of fiberglass that does not come apart. |
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The wax job was perfect! Mold pieces coming apart from the body with ease. |
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Now that we have real production fiberglass parts for the car we can start fitting them to the chassis. We have made; 2 door molds, 2 front fender molds, 2 rear fender molds, 2 upper hood section molds, 2 lower hood section molds and a front splash pan mold and a main body section mold. |
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Fitting all body parts to the frame for final fit. |
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We have now completed fitted and mounted all body panels and all hardware. |
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This may look like a completed car but now we have to take it apart and do all the paint and upholstery and wiring. |
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Fully assembled! |
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Now it time to design and build the upholstery. |
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For size comparison next to a Bernardi built in Princeton, Wisconsin. |
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Pictured are the only 2 Royal Sabers produced. The maroon car #2 is owned by Walt Adams in Glenview, Illinois. |
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A full side view of car #2. |
The completed first production car with its owners Ric and Cheryl Murphy. The second photo shows the Royal Saber with 2 Tryon Vipers also owned by us. |