Right.
As some of you know, my +T project is now up and running successfully, and now its time to get the car looking a little better. Craig has generously offered a great deal of his time and energy, and is helping me fix a bunch of my rust spots, with the intention of respraying the bottom half of the car once its all fixed. I'm pretty stoked for this, and I figured I'd post progress up here.
First up...my refinished grille. Got this one off Dale, with the intention of using it once I remove the crappy looking flathood off the wagon. I sanded it down, did some filling, changed the badge, and repainted the chrome black.
Next up, the problem.
While the left side looks worse than the right, both sides have rot in front of the rear wheelwell, and on the bottom of the rear quarter panels. The right side has a bit more rot inside the wheelwell which will be fixed. The majority of the rust on the car is in these spots. They've been fixed with bondo before, but kept coming back. Time for sheet metal. The rest of the rust is mostly surface. Not bad for a car with nearly 500 k.
Next up, we built a template for the wheelwell bits, cut some 22 ga sheetmetal, and then bent it up. Craig made this block in the shape of the patch to help the bends form.
And then he used it to hammer the pieces into shape. (Craig may want to correct my terminology...I'm new to this) Craig's mad skilz at work here. The multiple bends with the lip is a little crazy...not something I'd attempt on my own.
Here's a look at the right patch against the original panel.
It still needs to bend top to bottom, but this will be done against the car in place.
Next up was the template for the rear quarters. Its a beauty. Art school skills coming in handy here....
The panels got cut, and Craig used a bench mounted brake to make the long bend, creating the one inch wide bit at the bottom.
The slight bend of the panel was made by hand against a 3 inch pipe.
The final bend against the fender lip will be made against the actual panel on the car.
Next up, cutting out the rusty bits, and welding in the new stuff. More to come.