Justin,
Just read through the last two pages of this thread to catch up with exactly what you are doing.
Several things come to mind.
1). Just how many people starting out 356 wise fail to realise how the rust can get into a 356 underneath and spread so far over 54 years? And this underneath is actually far better than some.
2). How many 356 cars are still on the road with these box sections rotting away under their feet?
3). How many realise the importance if they start to repair themselves the need for complex braces like you made to hold the body in one place, the ever increasing range of tools including a spit to just get at it all?
4). The 356 can still look wonderful with a rusty top half, its a nightmare if its even half as bad underneath.
I did the welding on mine when it was 18 years old, it was a pampered car from new, thank goodness I didn't buy the other rusty ones I saw then.
As I have said before ( a number of times ) you make this work look easy glancing from one photo to another, seeing how you always use old parts mocked up to check fit, even that looks easy! None of this is easy, it real hard work and even harder when you have to process something like that swaging on the heater tube entry.
I guess when you read bodywork restoration work on a rusty 356 is going to cost around the $50k figure you have to understand by looking at threads like this why its that amount.
No where else Justin can a 356 guy with rust to contend with get a better instruction than here.
Its going to be a nice car when this is finished, no hidden surprises
for sure.
Roy
Just read through the last two pages of this thread to catch up with exactly what you are doing.
Several things come to mind.
1). Just how many people starting out 356 wise fail to realise how the rust can get into a 356 underneath and spread so far over 54 years? And this underneath is actually far better than some.
2). How many 356 cars are still on the road with these box sections rotting away under their feet?
3). How many realise the importance if they start to repair themselves the need for complex braces like you made to hold the body in one place, the ever increasing range of tools including a spit to just get at it all?
4). The 356 can still look wonderful with a rusty top half, its a nightmare if its even half as bad underneath.
I did the welding on mine when it was 18 years old, it was a pampered car from new, thank goodness I didn't buy the other rusty ones I saw then.
As I have said before ( a number of times ) you make this work look easy glancing from one photo to another, seeing how you always use old parts mocked up to check fit, even that looks easy! None of this is easy, it real hard work and even harder when you have to process something like that swaging on the heater tube entry.
I guess when you read bodywork restoration work on a rusty 356 is going to cost around the $50k figure you have to understand by looking at threads like this why its that amount.
No where else Justin can a 356 guy with rust to contend with get a better instruction than here.
Its going to be a nice car when this is finished, no hidden surprises
for sure.
Roy
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