One day at a time...
The engine compartment and crossmember are in epoxy primer, which I've waited a week or so to cure so I could sand it down. The crossy sprayed nicely but I spazzed out and the engine bay ended up a little spitty, but I also have some sanding scratches and mung to blend out there anyway. No photos here.
Timeline dictates that I purchase body panels soon, as they'll take about a month to receive. Therefore I started hacking away at the bondo I knew about to see what lies beneath and how far it extends. The right rear got smoked at some point and some hack, who was in love with a slide puller and a putty knife, "fixed" it.
Here's part of what I ground off the right rear of the car, minus a few leaves and things:
Revealing this:
In that shot you can see the puller marks on the front lip and the rear of the door. The holes were just filled in with bondo instead of welded shut, and bondo acts like a sponge and soaks up water. Water was pulled in from the backside and when the outsde rusted, the bondo started popping off. The door doesn't live in as serious an environment as the rear fender so it hasn't rusted, but there was SO MUCH bog on the door because the middle part is all bulged out and bondo was used behind the bulge to blend it back to the fender. It wasn't more than about 1/4" anywhere but that's too much.
What it should look like:
What it does look like:
The door skin is all stretched out and we're going to need some shrinking magic to get things back into shape. The good news is that the door is not rusty, not even on the lower edge where the drip holes are. I haven't pulled the door card from the inside so I don't know what the inside of the skin looks like yet.
The rear fender was patched up with equal skill. The whole section below the trim was heated and pulled and heated and pulled into reasonable shape, but again much of it was left bulged high so considerable filler was needed to get it all up to level. There were a couple chunks of sheet welded in to build up the arch, either due to rust or due to impact damage, and these are still fairly solid though there's a new rust hole at the top of the arch. New arch sections will be purchased.
Again, what it should look like compared to what it does look like:
The rear section is all wavy and bumpy from the torch & hammer method, but isn't too far off shape like the "smoother" front section. There is some rust at the lower rear edge of the fender, but the buttcheek MIGHT not be that bad. I have the lower rear fender and buttcheek replacement panels for the GT, we'll use what I need and will replace them later.
The filler panel below the trunk and between the fenders was something I thought would be real trouble, but after cutting the cheese it doesn't look nearly as bad as I thought. Rust, obviously, in the same spot below the taillight as the fender, and some impact damage but not nearly as much as the amount of bondo suggested. I didn't bother cutting down the trunk, as I know it's shot and will be replacing it anyway.
There is a big ol' dent here that nobody bothered doing much with besides spreading butter over. More slide hammer holes too, but thankfully not alot of rust anywhere. There are a couple other dents & dings in this panel, but really it's not too bad overall.
On to the happy surprise:
No filler or external rust here at all! The buttcheek is shot and will need to be replaced, but cosmetcally this section looks pretty good.
The inner fenders aren't so good, though. On the driver side there's a big hole right behind the seam between the front and rear arch sections, plus a lot of material missing at the rear end where the mudflap goes. This last spring I pop rivited some sheet in there and sprayed asphalt on it to seal it up for the summer, this will need more permanent replacement this year.
On the passenger side you can make out some of the trouble here: rust and holes from where the bodyman lovingly slid his hammer.
Another hole matching the hole on the top edge of the fender, plus more slide hammer holes:
And more sin above the mudflap.
So I have a better idea of what I need now, and will take a little expert advise before I order too much (or not enough) from VIP. I have to get the trunk emptied before I can start repairing the rear end, which means I have to finish off the engine bay and get everything installed first. Before I can do that I have both cosmetic and mechanical work to do.