Greg,
By coincidence I was diddling around with some F1 shocks too (no, not the Brabham's ), and really liked your results!
I wanted to avoid the tedious cleanup of the mold lines on my kit shocks, so naturally I had to complicate things. I cut away the springs and cleaned up the ends of the shocks, then made new springs using 0.020" styrene rods.
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This was trial #1 - the pitch spacing was not consistent.
There was some trial and error, but what eventually worked was to take two 0.020" rods and wrap them in parallel onto a drill of the appropriate diameter. Using tape to hold the coiled rods nice and tight to the drill, the whole thing was plunged into boiling water. After cooling it off under running tap water, the tape was carefully removed and the now formed rods were slid off the drill.
The smaller front shocks needed punched discs at the lower ends, since the brackets had insufficient flare.
And here is the wierd part. By gently turning the two coils in opposite directions, they could be "unthreaded" apart. The result were two sets of springs with a nice consistent pitch. Being plastic, the ends could be easily ground and tapered like the real thing, and they take paint well. Adjusting the length is also easy, as they only have light spring force.
OK confession time - I only used a single diameter rod for the struts. I know they should be 2-part telescoping tubes, but I got LAZY. I'll try to trick the eye by painting the struts in two contrasting metallic colors and leave it at that. If it looks bogus after completion, I'll do the struts properly next time. Pinkie promise.