ighazali Posted October 7 Report Posted October 7 I am looking for the interior piece that goes right under the throttle quadrant which allows for airflow and cabin heat. The plastic edging on my part is coming undone causing the metal flap to fallout. Also can someone please tell me where i can buy a BLUE prop lever handle because the Mooney currently has a black one and I would like to replace it with a blue one. Please see images.
Jsno Posted October 7 Report Posted October 7 Check with Mooney salvage yards for the vent piece. I would just paint the knob with blue paint. 1
Hank Posted October 7 Report Posted October 7 5 minutes ago, Jsno said: Check with Mooney salvage yards for the vent piece. I would just paint the knob with blue paint. I've been living with the factory-installed black knob in my C for 18 years now . . . . 1
Yetti Posted October 10 Report Posted October 10 Funny enough you should be able to buy a blue knob from Spruce Your vent does not look the same as my 75 did. might not be a stock vent. Cut out some alum or wood or plexiglass and paint to match. Yours only has 2 knobs there. my built in Dec 1974 1975 model also had the parking brake long with the other 2 vent controls. 1
bixmooney Posted October 10 Report Posted October 10 (edited) my console looks the same too, 75F model except below the lighting where the vent is. Here’s a picture of mine if it helps you. Black knob also. Edited October 10 by bixmooney 1
ighazali Posted November 10 Author Report Posted November 10 On 10/10/2025 at 1:21 PM, bixmooney said: my console looks the same too, 75F model except below the lighting where the vent is. Here’s a picture of mine if it helps you. Black knob also. That is the one! That plastic vent piece I cannot find anywhere!
M20F-1968 Posted Tuesday at 07:48 PM Report Posted Tuesday at 07:48 PM Parts like this are more easily made than found. Take your could part and use it as a mold. Hand layup a new part. By rights, you should use antimony trioxide into the resin as a flame retardant. Use mold release. Sand and fit appropriately. John Breda 1
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