There's a end cut or cross section that's not to scale on the Sunbeam Specialties catalog.How does the rubber seal hard top to windscreen fit in the hardtop ? A profile of the rubber so I can see if the wrong one was shipped
Darn it forgot to warn / suggest for rear seal. If a continuous single piece, you no longer have access to the screws holding the chrome pins. I feel that there could be a benefit to not completely tightening those screws until pin to hinge is properly aligned. In retrospect, i might use shorter segments of rubber seal there, on both sides of each chrome piece (ie 4 small pieces) to at least temporarily fit top to car. Once those screws are then tightened, the full seal can go over it.Well today I had assistance to fit that rear seal, hard top to car. we tried everything, warm soapy water. heating the rubber. cleaning out the channel rails of paint and other bits. Finally with me on a vicegrip grippiing the flat section and my mate guiding it in the channel, we finally got it in half way. It would not go any further. We realised that we would damage the seal if we tried to force it any more. So pull it out and then one of us held it in place and the other used a 8" heavy blade screwdriver and very slowly pushed the exposed part of the channel runner into place it took over 2 hours but it is in.
The mki seriesI-IV are a little better with noise than the vynil cover of the late cars. If you add a spind proofing to the soft top doors it helps.What's really needed is something to kill the sound intrusion from the boot as the h/t just makes it reverb and bounce about in the car. Love to see a boot firewall that's heavily soundproofed. Just as an experiment I filled the top cavity with insulation and poor man's Dynamatted the back of the soft top bin . Result less noise with and w/o the h/t on.
I Agree, as soon as I saw those 2 little channels i knew they would foul the placement of the rubber. they came off.So 1st off Maybe we should change the title of this so it reflects the hard top fitting?
Regarding corner pads being too big or too fat.
I recently sent away a set of really nice thin ones to Rix260 . I've taken about five hard tops apart because basically everyone has been kind of a pile of crap when I got it or look like crap. Under each of them under the corner pads was this little channel pictured. When I talk to Rick of Sunbeam Specialties he said take those things off.
since I did and I set my hard top on the car I got all kinds of room underneath the corner pads and don't have any problem whatsoever.
These two little metal channels one per side did not do anything other than possibly shim down the corner pad to be in contact with the car more. Possibly they also made it so the drain hole would work.
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This style of hard top went into production with the series 3 Alpine. That was quite some time before Tiger production started. Does any one know for sure that Pressed Steel stamped out the hard top shells or was it farmed out to outside vendors because they weren't standard to all cars. Changes may have happened. As long as the top fits, seals and looks good then what more could you ask for.Wow I'd hate to disagree with Doug Sr. as the angle in which the little channel was riveted on says different. At least one was original unrestored condition when disassembled but a couple had them. I have some allegedly fat corner pads on yet I have no problems related to their thickness but the opposite. I think the clearance of the drain holes make the most sense of them as the crusty hard tops I sold on definitely had their drain holes completely blocked by the corner pads, or basically what was left of the corners.
There was a change in some of the hardware on the Series 3 and beyond (including all Tigers) hardtops. Take a look at the Rootes Alpine Parts Manual. Here is a Snip of part of the diagram showing the hardtop fittings and two Snips of part of the pages listing these parts. You can see there was a change in part numbers (with the change related to an Alpine VIN number - 395008041).This style of hard top went into production with the series 3 Alpine. That was quite some time before Tiger production started. Does any one know for sure that Pressed Steel stamped out the hard top shells or was it farmed out to outside vendors because they weren't standard to all cars. Changes may have happened. As long as the top fits, seals and looks good then what more could you ask for.