Well I did get it for free. I wish I could get it inside someplace but i don't have an indoor garage of any sort. I'm looking to get a car cover but as of now my money is tight due to collegeThe original sheet metal has already been replaced. It's been replaced by rust . As stated above the first good foundation you need is a concrete pad with overhead protection from mother nature. Strip it down completely and get it media blasted (or something similar). Get it etch primed IMMEDIATELY after Stripping and you'll see exactly how to proceed. No short cuts when it comes to dealing with rust IMO. Get it all gone.
What's so bad about replacing the sheet metal anyway? If it's crap replace it. Nobody will know the car has had ANY metal replaced unless it was replaced poorly.
Just my two cents and worth what you paid
That's very very true. I don't have as much sentimental value as my father or my uncles because I never saw the car in its prime or met my great grandmother. I had planned on starting the car as a project in the next few years once I get a true job. But it is an uphill battle that hopefully, after I throw money at, I'll come out on top. Right now I'm going to stay with "return to running and driving condition"That's a tough call. With bad A pillars, you most definitely need a solid parts car to do it correctly. It won't be pretty under that windshield chrome.
Ask yourself, are you doing it because it is of sentimental value or because it will make a cool looking autocross car?
If it has sentimental value, then Challenger has it right, strip it down completely to get a good assessment of what you are starting with. Get it off the ground and on dry land. Buy a solid parts car and start tearing into it.
If it is all about autocross, Big_John has given you the best advise: start with something solid. There are a lot of orphan C bodies out there without their motors that you can get for under $1000. Collect the parts and then get to work.
Unfortunately, Once it stops being fun it becomes an up-hill battle and usually ends at the scrap yard.
The best move right now IMO, is to get her off the dirt and carefully inspect the underside... stored like she is, I would bet on serious rust damage under her. If she doesn't scare you off, put down a decent tarp or plastic and block up the wheels on big pavers to minimize the bottom exposure. A car cover at this point is less important than the bottom.Well I did get it for free. I wish I could get it inside someplace but i don't have an indoor garage of any sort. I'm looking to get a car cover but as of now my money is tight due to college
The best move right now IMO, is to get her off the dirt and carefully inspect the underside... stored like she is, I would bet on serious rust damage under her. If she doesn't scare you off, put down a decent tarp or plastic and block up the wheels on big pavers to minimize the bottom exposure. A car cover at this point is less important than the bottom.
That's true, I am afraid of what hides underneath it, but it still has some sentimental value. And they are getting increasingly harder to find. As of now I live in my great grandmother's house and use the garage that the car once was stored in as a storage shed. It would be cool to have the car running and driving like back whenThe rust you can see is just the tip of the ice berg. If you got the car free, keep it as a parts car. You can locate and buy a solid example of the car for less then the cost to repair this one. Just trying to save you from a lot of frustration and disappointment. Plus you'll save a bunch of time.
That's true, I am afraid of what hides underneath it, but it still has some sentimental value. And they are getting increasingly harder to find. As of now I live in my great grandmother's house and use the garage that the car once was stored in as a storage shed. It would be cool to have the car running and driving like back when
The local billboards changed from really really heavy vinyl to a nice lightweight woven material... they are my choice tarps, but I lost my ability to get them. Some outfit buys them by the semi-trailer load. BTW, they print 2 when they need 1 so they can get it back up fast if weather damages it... those trucks are hauling the new discards.There is a really great source for tarps in the billboard industry. I've procured used and new billboards and the make great tarps. Much heavier than the blue garbage tarps. I've paid a little for some off c'list but got most of them for free. When I saw guys s
changing a billboard ID stop and ask for the one they took down. More often than not they would give me at least one. Sometimes they would have others on the truck from jogs done earlier in the day.
Since there's sentimental value, here's what I suggest. By an identical car and use this one for parts. Transfer as many parts as makes sense and then you still have as almost as much of your great grandma's car as you would if started replacing sheet metal.That's true, I am afraid of what hides underneath it, but it still has some sentimental value. And they are getting increasingly harder to find. As of now I live in my great grandmother's house and use the garage that the car once was stored in as a storage shed. It would be cool to have the car running and driving like back when
The bumpers are solid. It's the lower valences that are rusted through. I know the trunk pan is good. I don't know about the floor pan because all the original interior is still in it but I think it may be okWhen I saw the rust through on the front bumper I knew things had to be bad. Can't recall the last time I saw a rusted through bumper. That alone would make me dread what I am going to find once the car is jacked up so I could look under. That is assuming there are safe and strong points for jack stands.