Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Sweet KeyLime Progress
This is where I left off in the last blog. Engine not pulled but some of the engine bay has been derusted and painted. All the front end body panels removed.
After being quoted approximately $4,000 to professionally paint the car I came across someones blog who was doing a "$50 Paintjob" on his car. This involved rolling Tremclad on the car. I figured for $50 (really probably more like $200 by the time I finish) that I couldn't go wrong. If it didn't work out well I could just sand/strip it off and have the professional job done and barely be out anything. I also figured that I could do a better job using spray paint. This is the result of my $200 paintjob (about $50 in so far). The first piece I put back on is the front valence:
Another view with the fender in place:
And...just for you, Chris, here is a picture of the paint showing the reflectivity. It's not quite done being polished since the battery in my polisher died, but, despite the fact that there is still some orange peel, it looks pretty good in my opinion.
- filling the massive hole behind the driver's side rear wheel
- repairing a couple holes in the passenger side rear wheel well
- drain coolant and replace the o-rings on the heater core
- start re-installing the interior
- painting the front bumper
- more work on the doors
Monday, June 21, 2010
Moving Forward
After:
The picture isn't great since I took it at night; the flash is reflecting off of every piece of dust and dirt in the car.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
A Holy Sunday
I also removed a hole bunch of seam sealer and rust from the hatch. Re-seam-sealed it and painted over it. No good pictures of this. It's not perfect but at least the rust is gone. I can always have it professionally fixed later.
If you look closely in the picture above you will also notice a smaller patch. I noticed a second rust spot on both sides. It is above a bracket that holds the gas tank up. That got cut out, patched and welded too. At this point I was very close to running out of wire for the welder so I moved on to only cutting and no patching. I was now on to the passenger side front footwell. It looked better than the drivers side (I'd already patched a couple small rust holes). I've been removing sound deadening as I go since it can hide rust. I removed the sound deadening material on the inside of the firewall and didn't see any rust...or so I thought. While I was getting ready to start cutting in the footwell I happened to glance upward and see this:
Nuts...that's the underside of the battery tray. It had looked a bit rusty from the top but I hadn't noticed any holes.
I guess it was a nice theory. So...on to the cutting.
I still need to clean it up a bit before I weld in new metal, but it won't be too difficult to fix this. Back to the footwell. It started out looking like this:
After a bit of cutting I was left with this. Doesn't look so bad...
Or does it?
Admittedly, I did cut out a fair bit more than I needed to because it would actually make it easier to patch. The rocker needed a bit of work too:
After a bit of cutting it looks like this. Unfortunately the factory jack point had to go since it was totally rusted.
While I was cleaning up my tools I decided to have a really quick go at the brake caliper. It looks like they should clean up nicely. This was the result of about a minute of work.
Oh, here is what the car looks like right now.
Hopefully in the next couple weeks I'll get all of the holes fixed and I'll be able to start putting stuff back into the car. Of course then I'll start working on removing all of the small bits of rust from the undercarriage and I may pull the engine to clean up the engine bay as well. The fun never ends!
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Winter Sucks
- A left fender
- Black leather door cards
- An original radio and speakers
- Some miscellaneous interior parts
- A complete cruise control unit
- A non-cracked dash
This weekend I am taking a trip to see a couple people in Toronto with some parts that I want:
- A mint right fender
- A cluster that doesn't have the hideous fading and bleeding white guage faces I've currently got
- An complete Mtech2 replica body kit
I also pulled off the metal front valence and I've been working at cleaning it up. The twisted wire wheel for my angle grinder has been my best friend in this endeavor; I'm stripping it down to the bare metal to get rid of any rust, then I'll rust treat it, re-prime and paint it.
The gas tank is a work in progress at this point. It looks like it is repairable; although I am keeping my eye out for a good one for a decent price - if I can get one for a fair price I have no problem with saving myself the work of trying to fix this one.