Justin wrote:"You might get okay coverage by blowing paint up here after the fact but nothing like spraying them before hand."
Something to try on those soon-to-be hidden areas in pre-assembly is brushing the epoxy primer where it isn't seen, less mess, no overspray. If it's a small area, I use a throw-away 'acid brush' or cheapie brush that can be cleaned a couple of times for more use. Mixing a small amount of a catalyzed product in any recycled aerosol cap, yogurt cup, frozen dinner tray, whatever, makes for easy clean-up. Then, it can all go in the recycle can. We need to cut down on waste AND time when we are 'on the clock.'
Another product I use is a copper-based spray from various producers like SEM, available through auto paint or welding supply outlets. It's a better "weld-through" primer that promotes the weld and yet secures the area around the weld...or between plug welds or spot welds, etc. I saw the tape on the soon-to-be-welded areas in your pictures and thought of that right away.
The upper area in the rear is smaller than in the front but both are very tight for future work of any kind. Even Porsche mostly missed those areas with the great enamel primer they used which wrapped over or into most all areas of a 356 and was then baked. We'll even spray some aerosol undercoat over the epoxy for continuous texture, even where no one will ever see it...any of it.
Of course, we seem to want our work to last more than just another 51+ years, don't we?
Thanks for the nice remarks about my writing. I enjoy doing that on this site. ((Sorry it's only in English! Entschuldigen mir))(My goal is to be better at another language, as so many on this site are!) I do the cars for a living, so I guess writing is perhaps a hobby. Writing about the cars is from the heart...I know I'll never make a real living at either....
Bruce
Something to try on those soon-to-be hidden areas in pre-assembly is brushing the epoxy primer where it isn't seen, less mess, no overspray. If it's a small area, I use a throw-away 'acid brush' or cheapie brush that can be cleaned a couple of times for more use. Mixing a small amount of a catalyzed product in any recycled aerosol cap, yogurt cup, frozen dinner tray, whatever, makes for easy clean-up. Then, it can all go in the recycle can. We need to cut down on waste AND time when we are 'on the clock.'
Another product I use is a copper-based spray from various producers like SEM, available through auto paint or welding supply outlets. It's a better "weld-through" primer that promotes the weld and yet secures the area around the weld...or between plug welds or spot welds, etc. I saw the tape on the soon-to-be-welded areas in your pictures and thought of that right away.
The upper area in the rear is smaller than in the front but both are very tight for future work of any kind. Even Porsche mostly missed those areas with the great enamel primer they used which wrapped over or into most all areas of a 356 and was then baked. We'll even spray some aerosol undercoat over the epoxy for continuous texture, even where no one will ever see it...any of it.
Of course, we seem to want our work to last more than just another 51+ years, don't we?
Thanks for the nice remarks about my writing. I enjoy doing that on this site. ((Sorry it's only in English! Entschuldigen mir))(My goal is to be better at another language, as so many on this site are!) I do the cars for a living, so I guess writing is perhaps a hobby. Writing about the cars is from the heart...I know I'll never make a real living at either....
Bruce
Dodged another bullet.
This was sort of the mental checklist: That crazy curved inner panel thats not fitting too flush at the moment has to butt up tight to the nose, hold the nose in the sweet spot so its gapped nicely against the hood. Then the latch base must be attached to it at just the right attitude so it engages correctly.
"your in way over your friggen head here"
These where all the thoughts and doubts I was going through when I took this photo. All I could do was put one foot in front of the other and the next step slowly revealed itself. So in other words you just have to go slow and take it as step at a time. If I did it so can you.
and still had to move the horn openings up to T-0 height but deemed that better than Trevor's part, but then again that's Rick Mullin, who can make any part he needs if he can't find one that suits him.
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