Volvo Community Forum. The Forums of the Volvo Owners Club

Forum Rules Volvo Owners Club About VOC Volvo Gallery Links Volvo History Volvo Press
Go Back   Volvo Owners Club Forum > "Technical Topics" > 140/164 Series General

Notices

140/164 Series General Forum for the Volvo 140 and 164 cars

Information
  • VOC Members: There is no login facility using your VOC membership number or the details from page 3 of the club magazine. You need to register in the normal way
  • AOL Customers: Make sure you check the 'Remember me' check box otherwise the AOL system may log you out during the session. This is a known issue with AOL.
  • AOL, Yahoo and Plus.net users. Forum owners such as us are finding that AOL, Yahoo and Plus.net are blocking a lot of email generated from forums. This may mean your registration activation and other emails will not get to you, or they may appear in your spam mailbox

Thread Informations

Need help on 1973 Volvo 145 paint color

Views : 1494

Replies : 2

Users Viewing This Thread :  

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old Jun 11th, 2018, 23:01   #1
cytherian
New Member
 

Last Online: Jun 14th, 2018 07:11
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: Hoboken, NJ
Question Need help on 1973 Volvo 145 paint color

My very first car was a 1973 Volvo 145E. For a 19-year old guy, it was pretty far from sporty.



At the time, I'd really wanted something more like a 1976 Mercury Capri. But, the unusual situation of having 2 best friends who both owned a Volvo 145, it was hard to resist becoming a "VOLVO Brother." Anyway, it was a tremendously practical car for my college days, but it was under powered and got terrible gas mileage. And it wasn't nearly as reliable as Toyota and Honda cars at that time. It was eventually sold off and I moved on. Still, I never forgot it. In my mind, it blew away any other station wagons of the day with its modern looking dashboard and instrumentation, handsome stature, plus superb safety features compared to its dated American counterparts and tinny cheap looking Japanese competitors.

Along the way, I picked up a very nice looking Rob Eddie (Brooklin brand) diecast car model. They'd just happened to choose the 1973 145 model and in a color that was actually what I'd originally wished to have on my old Volvo. I've had this model for over 10 years. But one day, as fate would have it, I'd left it out on display and an object struck it, chipping the paint and denting the metal.




As you can see, a rather glaring bit of damage. The paint looks to be some kind of medium blue-green metallic color. So I contacted Brooklin models and asked about the paint. Supposedly they selected an authentic original paint color that was used by Volvo. They didn't have any more of it and all they could tell me is this name and code: Volvo Mellanbla Blue, manufacture code 406, ICI code 2175B.

When I looked this up, I did find 406 but it applies to many different models and isn't described as metallic... while I've spotted other paint codes that use the word "metallic." It's definitely a metallic paint. Here's a better shot of it:


From first glance you'd say BLUE, but when compared to anything else that is about a medium blue, it becomes BLUE-GREEN.

On one automotive paint site, for 1973 there was no 406, but the closest match is code 99. But that's just noted as medium blue. However, code 406 turns up under 1992, and they've got code 406 noted as blue metallic.

So my presumption is that perhaps Rob Eddie (Brooklin) chose a later model paint on their 1973 Volvo 145 model, and that 406 is likely the correct paint.

Any thoughts on how I should go on this, or perhaps a more accurate paint source? Please note I'm in the USA and would like to avoid a hefty shipping charge as is typical from the Europe. Thanks!
cytherian is offline   Reply With Quote
Old Jun 12th, 2018, 14:01   #2
classicswede
Trader Volvo in my veins
 
classicswede's Avatar
 

Last Online: Today 20:25
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Anglesey
Default

I would suggest buying a small pot of the 406 and paint a test (not on the model) and make sure the colour does match.

Its not going to be easy to get the colour match bang on so chances are the best option would be to stip the model and air brush. In that case you could go with any colour you want
classicswede is online now   Reply With Quote
Old Jun 14th, 2018, 06:55   #3
cytherian
New Member
 

Last Online: Jun 14th, 2018 07:11
Join Date: Jun 2018
Location: Hoboken, NJ
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by classicswede View Post
I would suggest buying a small pot of the 406 and paint a test (not on the model) and make sure the colour does match.

Its not going to be easy to get the colour match bang on so chances are the best option would be to stip the model and air brush. In that case you could go with any colour you want
Thanks for the suggestion. Stripping the model and repainting is too aggressive for the repair I wish to do, so I guess I'll just have to settle on getting close but not spot-on.

EDIT: Brooklin models contacted me again with updated info. They said they may have been in error and that the paint code is likely 115. I looked it up and it does sound right this time -- Green-Blue Metallic.

Last edited by cytherian; Jun 14th, 2018 at 07:11.
cytherian is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 20:55.


Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.