Originally posted by JTR70" post=21428
Justin, are you letting Phil keep track of your time as he does of his on Foamcar? I am used to thinking - best result for the least time- a business necessity- so I can only admire your perspicacity, dedication and talent to an area that no one but you will see.
I would be starting here:
http://www.restoration-design.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Store_Code=rd&Screen=PROD&Product_Code=P127T1
I worry about "survivor cars"....really nice 356s that come in with easy answers to questions like "what's wrong in this picture?"
-Bruce
I have no where near your experience and expertise but with my limited amount of exposure with these cars I know that there is always the sleeping dog of deep hidden rust and extra work lying in wait to bite you right on the ass. (this frame of course did not disappoint) All of which you simply can never account for until your waist high in it. Then to have added stressor of my hourly worth nose diving because I'm now locked into a set price for labor and I just discovered more of it I have to do to complete the job;
Its too depressing to even think about and quite un-motivating to continue moving forward as well. I've already experienced that with a speedster several years ago and won't make the same mistake twice. The rusted out conduits are a perfect example of this, I never would have dreamed they'd be shot. But thanks to time, the laws of thermal dynamics and the price of these cars going up the "new Donor grade" 356's are more rotted out then ever before. If this was a set budget job I could have never foreseen this trouble and those old conduits would have most likely stayed in there too. This goes back at your earlier statement of the best job for the time and money and what can be seen and not be seen. Being in a locked in budget predicament I would be well underwater by now and of course would be looking for my best way out to cut corners instead of concentrating on how to best to repair it. I would have closed that tunnel up with them, omitted the photos of the damage on this thread and moved on. They'd of worked and by the time the worms of grease would have made themselves known I'd probably be 5-10 years removed by then and could claim "oh they weren't leaking back then"... I don't want to be that guy or be forced into that position so this is why I am strictly by the hour until its finished or he pulls the plug on the project which he is always free to do at anytime. Also if I spend an hour working on someone else's project that's an hour I didn't spend working on my car.
By the same token I'm not milking the poor guy either and am all for saving time and grunt-work when I can. On several occasions I have weighed the cost of replacement versus my time to fix it. The tunnel is a perfect example RD wants 1025.00 for a new tunnel, the time it took me to re-flange and convert the original to a T1 still put us at well over 300.00 in savings over buying their new one. The rear frame section runners and cross member a while back was just the opposite. It was far cheaper to have Steve Hogue knock out those new panels than to pay me to clean all the mount flanges, fix the rust and old accident damage to the left side. A far cleaner end result as well as saving money.


Comment