Are the hinges on 1968s (the ones riveted to the gas door) chromed or dull cad. All of the un-restored ones I see seem to be a dull finish to me.
1968 gas door hinge
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
Here you go Sal, #9643, dull.Attached FilesLast edited by Jack C.; January 30, 2010, 11:15 AM.Jack Corso
1972 Elkhart Green LT-1 Coupe 43,200 miles
Top Flight 1994, 2018 & 2021- Top
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
Sal,
The 4 black (now brownish) screws that Jack has attaching the bezel could also be chrome screws. Both types were used.Last edited by Terry B.; January 30, 2010, 12:26 PM.Terry Buchanan
Webmaster / Secretary - Heart of Ohio Chapter www.ncrs.org/hoo
Corvettes Owned:
1977 Coupe
1968 Convertible 427/390 (L-36) Chapter Top Flight 2007, Regional Top Flight 2010, National Top Flight 2011
2003 Electron Blue Coupe
2019 Torch Red Grand Sport Coupe- Top
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
THe lid on mine doesn't stay up by itself I was told a spring to keep it up came in 69 is that true?
or is my 68's lid supposed to stay up?
thanks- Top
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
I would think that the gas lid is suppose to stay up. The spring, from what I remember seeing, is rivited to the underside portion of the hinge area and is not reproduced. What I did with mine that had been broken long ago is to cut a small black rubber hose (smaller hose the better) about an inch long and then make a slice on the side of the hose. Place the sliced area over the hinge portion that slides next to the bezel and the friction with the hose and hinge holds the lid in place just fine. It's also hard to tell it's there unless you are looking for it.Last edited by Terry B.; January 30, 2010, 02:13 PM.Terry Buchanan
Webmaster / Secretary - Heart of Ohio Chapter www.ncrs.org/hoo
Corvettes Owned:
1977 Coupe
1968 Convertible 427/390 (L-36) Chapter Top Flight 2007, Regional Top Flight 2010, National Top Flight 2011
2003 Electron Blue Coupe
2019 Torch Red Grand Sport Coupe- Top
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
Jack,
I see that the JM says there was no spring in 68 or 69 to hold the gas door open. Could this be wrong? I'm sure I've seen a spring. Please advise.Terry Buchanan
Webmaster / Secretary - Heart of Ohio Chapter www.ncrs.org/hoo
Corvettes Owned:
1977 Coupe
1968 Convertible 427/390 (L-36) Chapter Top Flight 2007, Regional Top Flight 2010, National Top Flight 2011
2003 Electron Blue Coupe
2019 Torch Red Grand Sport Coupe- Top
Comment
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
Terry, I'll have to wait for a warmer day to go out in the garage and take mine off to take a look for any evidence that there was a spring there at one time. Nice idea with the hose.Jack Corso
1972 Elkhart Green LT-1 Coupe 43,200 miles
Top Flight 1994, 2018 & 2021- Top
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
There should be a spring to hold both 68 (late cars at least) and 69 fuel doors open. It is a U shaped spring that is riveted to the bottom of the door bezel. In 69 it also included a rubber bumper.
In the attached picture a 68 door is on the left and a 69 on the right.
John- Top
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
Thanks John for the pictures,
I knew I remembered seeing it. The spring wedges the door hinge and keeps it open.Terry Buchanan
Webmaster / Secretary - Heart of Ohio Chapter www.ncrs.org/hoo
Corvettes Owned:
1977 Coupe
1968 Convertible 427/390 (L-36) Chapter Top Flight 2007, Regional Top Flight 2010, National Top Flight 2011
2003 Electron Blue Coupe
2019 Torch Red Grand Sport Coupe- Top
Comment
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
There should be a spring to hold both 68 (late cars at least) and 69 fuel doors open. It is a U shaped spring that is riveted to the bottom of the door bezel. In 69 it also included a rubber bumper.
In the attached picture a 68 door is on the left and a 69 on the right.
John
My 70 uses the same spring setup as my 68. I still have the original spring for it, but it is not attached. I am considering using JB Weld to attach it.
Wonder how many 68-70 Corvettes do not have this spring anymore? I was lucky on my 70, it was still clipped to the raising portion of the hinge- Top
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
Jim,
Thanks for your confirmation of the spring. I hope earlier build original owners of '68 will help confirm the earlier existance of the spring too. Looks as if a change needs to be made in the '68-'69 Judging Manual when it says no springs held the door open in either 68 or 69.Terry Buchanan
Webmaster / Secretary - Heart of Ohio Chapter www.ncrs.org/hoo
Corvettes Owned:
1977 Coupe
1968 Convertible 427/390 (L-36) Chapter Top Flight 2007, Regional Top Flight 2010, National Top Flight 2011
2003 Electron Blue Coupe
2019 Torch Red Grand Sport Coupe- Top
Comment
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Re: 1968 gas door hinge
Thanks for posting the pictures John. My original owner FEB built 68 did come with the u-shaped spring to hold the gas door open. I gave up on getting a replacement spring. I personally searched through the GM Corvette parts book back in the early 80's. All I could find was the spring for a later year after 1970. Don't remember the exact year the spring design was changed. I ordered the later model one just to see what I would get. Totally different design spring.
My 70 uses the same spring setup as my 68. I still have the original spring for it, but it is not attached. I am considering using JB Weld to attach it.
Wonder how many 68-70 Corvettes do not have this spring anymore? I was lucky on my 70, it was still clipped to the raising portion of the hinge
The 68-70 fuel door bezel assembly was an exceedingly poor design. The "hold open" spring FREQUENTLY breaks off of the "spun" rivets which retain it to the bezel. The spring was never available as a separate part from GM.
Many years ago, after replacing 2 of the bezels on my 1969 due to the spring breaking off, I converted my car to the 1971-74 design. From a functional perspective, this is a MUCH better design. By "notching" the bezel in the front, one can use the 69-70 style door WITHOUT removing the "hold down" bracket from the door. Then, if one wanted to return the system to the original style bezel for judging, it would only be an easy 10 minute job. Believe me, judging is the ONLY reason I could see to go back to the original design bezel.
Although I think that JB Weld would work to retain the spring, I think if I were going to repair one of these bezels, I'd simply drill and tap the bezel for small machine screws to retain the spring.
My BIG concern with the original design bezel: when trying to disengage the lid from the "hold open" spring, a significant amount of force can be required. I consider this deleterious to the rear deck and the paint on the rear deck. I can easily see where cracking of either could be "induced". Also, when disengaging the door from the "hold closed" device, the same sort of force needs to be applied in the opposite direction. I realize that the "hold closed" tension is adjustable but, under just about any circumstance, some significant force will be required to disengage the door.
The 71-74 design COMPLETELY eliminates the need for any force to be applied to open or close the door. In my mind, the ONLY way to go.In Appreciation of John Hinckley- Top
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