Steering Wheel

Redid my 65 with gorilla glue(it was in 3 pieces), epoxy, glaze and paint from tower paint. i couldn't stand to look at it any more.
I scrubbed it clean, glued the chunks back together, and filled big missing pieces with epoxy. (I only had hairlines on the rim, big pieces on the spokes)
For the rim i tried to fill hairlines with the glazing putty. Lots and lots of sanding later and paint it looks and feels great. About 2 months later my 4 year old kicked the driver seat forward and it smacked the wheel and put a hairline crack right back in, but it's still worlds batter than before.
Like fishypete,, it was only about 40 bucks and lots of elbow grease for me to do the job. The only advice i can offer is to check your work in daylight. I worked at night over the slopsink sanding and i thought it looked great a few times until I went to prime/paint the next day and I had missed a ton of spots.