Drew nailed it with his factory plan and elevation diagrams.
Those points are the most important but still be sure the chassis is as level as possible when measuring and that leveling also facilitates the measurement of inclination (side-to-side) of the front beam, as they can be twisted and still have the bottom come very close....the difference being from either a high hit or low hit in it's past....if any.
Most all prior hits are visually indicated if you really look closely. There will be creases and shifts that don't match side-to-side, wrinkles beyond what the force-fitting of the construction left behind, added rust from overlap separation long ago, etc. Also, most inner deformations were not well repaired when the 356s were not worth what they are now or cared for as they are now when they were....can you believe it?.....just daily drivers.
Those points are the most important but still be sure the chassis is as level as possible when measuring and that leveling also facilitates the measurement of inclination (side-to-side) of the front beam, as they can be twisted and still have the bottom come very close....the difference being from either a high hit or low hit in it's past....if any.
Most all prior hits are visually indicated if you really look closely. There will be creases and shifts that don't match side-to-side, wrinkles beyond what the force-fitting of the construction left behind, added rust from overlap separation long ago, etc. Also, most inner deformations were not well repaired when the 356s were not worth what they are now or cared for as they are now when they were....can you believe it?.....just daily drivers.
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