2.25 Engine Blue - Colour Code - Engine Enamel

Started by Rock Star Eddie, Aug 13, 2024, 02:40 PM

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Rock Star Eddie

Hello all

I reached out to Paintman to bring in a litre of proper colour-matched engine enamel, but it is over £120 just shipping alone to Canada.

I think i need to consider getting a colour matched enamel custom made here.

Wondering if anyone has a colour breakdown or a mix for this.  Or if someone in the US/Canada has sourced something that is an exact match.

Thank you.
Eddie J DeJong
1961 Series IIa 88 SW Safari Top
1954 Series I 107 Pickup (Sold)
1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee 5.9

Craig T

Not sure on engine colour codes but just to say you won't be needing a litre of it. I think one litre would be enough to paint three coats on around 30 engines!

Are you going for a full restoration and set on getting the colour right? Chrysler engine blue is not far off, slightly darker but would be easier to find I imagine.

Craig.

chipbury

Not sure if this is the colour code you need?

On Lightweights the engine is painted a duck egg blue, mine cam from Paragon - enamel BS381 101 sky blue gloss.

geoff

Wouldn't a 1961 engine be painted in grey  :confused


island dormy

  My 62 and the 69 are both light grey in color, both stock original engines.
1/2 a pint is way more than enough.
Sorry I have no clue on a name for the grey paint I bought which was Tremclad gloss oil paint. I just bought a can of grey and mixed white and black with it until it was close to the original.

  Victor
1962 Dormobile in the family since 1964
1969 NADA Dormobile 2.6L #800 out of 811 NADAS built

Rock Star Eddie

Quote from: geoff on Aug 13, 2024, 03:58 PMWouldn't a 1961 engine be painted in grey  :confused


:shakinghead

I was told that I have a Series 2a motor in mine from later than 1961.
Eddie J DeJong
1961 Series IIa 88 SW Safari Top
1954 Series I 107 Pickup (Sold)
1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee 5.9

geoff


Twomokes

All civilian engines into S3 production were Admiraly Grey. The blue was a military colour only.
The old days are the old days only because there're gone and won't be back.

geoff

The blue was used when the military rebuilt their engines and everything got painted over, no finess.