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Don Elliott said:The 8 for the grille were always hard to remove or secure with the spire clip under the apron at the bottom. And the 4 on top of the grille - well, forget it.
So I cut some pieces of hardwood ( from an old broken hockey stick handle) and used my bench grinder to "file" the curve needed to match with the curves on the back of the apron. Then I glued them into place behind the holes in the apron, allowed the glue to set, manually installed the grille and match-marked the 8 holes in the grille with pencil marks for the screw holes in the wood. Then I removed the grille, took a tiny drill and drilled the 8 tiny holes into the wood. I re-installed the grille and tightened the 8 tiny screws into the tap-drilled holes in the wood. It works and they stay in place each time I remove the grille. On occasion, I have to re-tighten the top ones at these tend to be affected by vibration and gravity. No TRA or VTR judge has ever seen them.
Frank, the sources are in the first line of the post. I'd already had a downloaded copy of the hardware catalogue, with its detailed descriptions and pictures (such as Randall posted), but, at least for me, Googling "Standard Triumph Hardware Catalogue" yielded a copy on the Internet as the very first hit!angelfj said:Andy, thanks. where did you find that detail?
Don Elliott said:I put in Philips head screws when I re-did my TR3A and lost points at TRA because they were not screws with straight slots. But that's all I could get in 1990. But about 1996, while at Car Day in Bowie, MD, I saw that Roadster Factory had the correct ones so I bought more than I needed. Then I changed tham all for the straight slotted ones with the correct tiny dished cup washers. Interior trim, interior doors, up the A-posts and for the grille.
I was told these are #4 size, but I never checked it out. But they are identical to the ones that came on my 1958 TR3A when new. I still have about 30 of these in my box of old spare screws.
The 8 for the grille were always hard to remove or secure with the spire clip under the apron at the bottom. And the 4 on top of the grille - well, forget it.
So I cut some pieces of hardwood ( from an old broken hockey stick handle) and used my bench grinder to "file" the curve needed to match with the curves on the back of the apron. Then I glued them into place behind the holes in the apron, allowed the glue to set, manually installed the grille and match-marked the 8 holes in the grille with pencil marks for the screw holes in the wood. Then I removed the grille, took a tiny drill and drilled the 8 tiny holes into the wood. I re-installed the grille and tightened the 8 tiny screws into the tap-drilled holes in the wood. It works and they stay in place each time I remove the grille. On occasion, I have to re-tighten the top ones at these tend to be affected by vibration and gravity. No TRA or VTR judge has ever seen them.
Andrew Mace said:Frank, the sources are in the first line of the post. I'd already had a downloaded copy of the hardware catalogue, with its detailed descriptions and pictures (such as Randall posted), but, at least for me, Googling "Standard Triumph Hardware Catalogue" yielded a copy on the Internet as the very first hit!angelfj said:Andy, thanks. where did you find that detail?
Those familiar with the TR2/3/3A Spare Parts Catalogue issued by Standard-Triumph know that illustrations weren't often added to or brought up-to-date; most still show only earliest versions of parts in the illustrations, if indeed parts are illustrated at all (lots of hardware bits aren't illustrated). But a late enough edition does show the part numbers for attachment of grille to apron, so all I did was take those part numbers from the SPC, look them up in the Hardware Catalogue, and then prayed that my not-so-nimble fingers and eyes could transcribe the information to [virtual] print!
FWIW, I installed Riv-nuts in the apron and used SS screws. The grille hides the Riv-nuts, so unless someone crawls under the car, they'll never know the difference.Don Elliott said:The 8 for the grille were always hard to remove or secure with the spire clip under the apron at the bottom.