Wow!! "Ever so slowly" - but - LOOK at that frame! Very nice job there, Jon...Those look nice guys! Member Joel Young was very nice to freely share his graphics work with us.
I, too, used his work and had a print shop make the ones Joel did and some more that I made myself (the Summit/Early Platinum/Gold one was derived by stretching Joel's original). These are printed on a vinyl-type, peel-off decal sheets. While I can't guarantee how long mine will last, they are not inkjet and are supposed to be able to resist at least some water. The only hard part is I have to cut out each one!
I made quite a few so that I can offer them to other hobbyists- not as any money maker (ha!). I only charge $2.00 for the first one and $1.00 each for additional ones, sent in a regular envelope by first class mail. If you don't have the resources or time the guys here put into this, PM if you need any.
Here is a picture of the ones I have available:
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I just used some of my own decals on my ever so slowly coming together 1st generation Summit:
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It's impossible to get them perfect, I try too and fail. You're stuff always seems to come pretty close though.Thanks, guys, for the complements. It's not a perfect restore, but it IS a really special grill. I feel it was the zenith of Weber's efforts and being built in 1998 - it was close enough to George'stime that Weber was still completely the real deal. They went all out on this grill and built it like a tank. It has a look all of its own and to my eyes so much cooler - and more "Weber" - than the bland stainless-steel grills that make up the high-end market today.
I am hopeful my lucky find of a sheet metal shop that was willing to make stainless shield plates to reinforce the weak firebox will give this grill another long run.
The 6-burner apparently went for about $3K and this one for $2.4K back in 1998. That translates into about $5,500/$4,500 today! Before the introduction of the Vieluxe, this was Weber's finest and most expensive grill.
I hate to tell ya what I actually gave for it.The 6-burner apparently went for about $3K and this one for $2.4K back in 1998. That translates into about $5,500/$4,500 today! Before the introduction of the Vieluxe, this was Weber's finest and most expensive grill.