racer-john
Well-known member
If it isn't snow, WhiskeyTangoFox-trot is it?Anyway, I'm calling it snow even though it isn't.
If it isn't snow, WhiskeyTangoFox-trot is it?Anyway, I'm calling it snow even though it isn't.
We DON'T cope with it. We "Oh me@! Oh my!" it breathlessly.
I read online if it's soft-ish its called "graupel". I'd never heard that word before. Is this a word you midwest and easterners know?If it isn't snow, WhiskeyTangoFox-trot is it?
With regards to "graupel", I have lived my 71 years in Missouri and Oklahoma and heard the word for the first time this year. For those wondering, graupel is sleet except instead of being hard and clear, it is soft and white.I read online if it's soft-ish its called "graupel". I'd never heard that word before. Is this a word you midwest and easterners know?
Oh well, whatever it was there was a LOT of it for awhile and it stuck around for about two hours, then rain melted it away.




Young woman attendent the gym had never seen snow (born and raised in Florida). First light dusting we got, she ran outside and was dancing in it. It was kinda cool to watch her. By the second real snow fall, she was grumbling more the rest of us.Clouds finally parted. (The eastern guys rolling their eyes and saying, "This rube SoCal guy is all excited over a little dusting of snow") - Yes, you're right that I am.
Global warming issues in the ‘40&‘50 ?It's been since 1949 that local got measurable snow. Here's a pic of Pasadena that winter. Looking online it happened VERY occasionally in the 40's & 50's. A bunch of articles asked, "Will it ever snow in Los Angeles again?"
The water aisle empties as well.Global warming issues in the ‘40&‘50 ?
Bread, milk, eggs, and alcohol disappear around here at any mention of bad weather.

You paint the plate black. Then roll on the yellow paint with a hard foam roller. It takes several light coats.My nephew surprised me with this set of 1951 California license plates. They're in almost perfect condition just cosmetically ugly. Even gave me original chrome frames. though they're "picky" and one is broken. Thinking maybe JB Weld, sanding, filling and chrome-ish paint rather than repop ones.
I've always wanted era-correct plates for my '55 truck. Anyone know if these are commercial plates or if I even need be concerned about that? I know some years had "COM" vertically but I'm unsure which years.
There's an eBay seller who offers restoration kits - basically stick on letters in correct font - but he doesn't offer them for these plates. I'm thinking I can:
1. Take photos and have a print shop make the letters on non-fading vinyl, then sand/paint black, apply yellow letters
2. Do the old style restoration process: paint layers and sanding off over letters.
3. Mask and hand paint or spray letters - but I doubt my ability to make them correct right.
Other ideas & suggestions will be appreciated.
![]()
Mine wasn't the j-roller that you use for laminating, but, if it rolls very easily and smoothly, then it might work. I'd give it a try. My roller was about as hard as the rubber on a drum floor sander. It probably came from a printer. It might even have been slightly rough and porous rubber, but my memory of it says foam. A roller for inking printing blocks would probably do. If it didn't hold the paint well, then a nice sanding with 220 on the orbital sander would probably give it the tooth necessary to hold paint.Thanks Kay! I've never heard of the roller idea. A "hard foam roller" - are the kind you're referring to @ Home Cheapo or are you talking about something harder than that? I've got a very smooth harass roller that's actually for pressing
formica onto the substrate.
I've got to figure out what color yellow would be right.
I am sure Don Long could do it for you before lunch time.
How does one time travel to get 1951 plates on a 1955 vehicle?

Good suggestion. I've got a stack of assorted state license plates. I'll pick a crappy one.No matter what you do, Buy a couple of junk plates with embossed letters to practice on.
I agree the plate isn't flat with just raised letters. It wasn't even when it was new. I'll gently flatten it as best I can but don't expect a huge improvement.There aren't that many letters/numbers- I'd probably spray the background, mask carefully, and then spray the embossed letter/numbers.
Problem with trying to roll the paint is that the license plate isn't completely flat- or the embossment isn't even.
Best way to do it if it was flat would be with a printers brayer.- hard rubber roller that will not hold a lot of paint.
What's "foreman tape"? I did a quick Google search and came up empty.I was thinking foreman tape on a flat surface and then top coat them
Guessing a craft center might have what you're talking about? The issue with rolling any which way is still finding the right color paint!There are rubber rollers that were used for spreading ink on stamps. Or a stencil roller.
Sure Hobby lobby or Michaels.Guessing a craft center might have what you're talking about?
Lots of options so far. Cleaning is first order of business. Pics to come.


What's "foreman tape"? I did a quick Google search and came up empty.
That's a new one on me. Must be a very local term. I have had a measuring tape with Foreman on it, that I got at a little trade show, or inadvertantly stole off the counter somewhere, but it advertised promotional products. It didn't last as long as my HF **** tapes, which contrary to common belief, last as long as anybody else's **** tapes.Sorry shop term for 2 side or double side sticky tape.
Bob, All excellent suggestions and thanks for the links.....I would paint the plate with a catalyzed black urethane first. If you screw up the yellow, you can wipe it off with lacquer thinner without affecting the black underneath.
