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Sunday, June 17, 2012

Throwin' Glass and Slingin' Putty

This week the repairs on the rear body continue.  First I added a second layer of fiberglass to the layer created last week.  Then, with a solid framework to build on, I began to reshape the exterior of the panel.  I made several templates of the undamaged side to use as a go-by.





As you can see the shape of the panel was considerably different than the other side.






After considerable filler and sanding, it's nearing the correct shape again.




Unfortunately, one of the required adjustments was still structural.  The pillar at the door needed to be cut loose and offset a half inch toward the outside.  This put strain on the newly repaired strut.  So, it needs to be repaired yet again. . .



 Once the lower repair is completed, the aluminum strut can be reattached, and the cause of the problem will finally and permanently be eliminated.



Monday, June 11, 2012

Loosing a Few Pounds


It would seem I've avoided the remaining fiberglass work as long as possible.  The rear of the car has been hidden under a blue tarp in the back yard since the initial demantling several years ago.  It has several of the kind of knicks and tears at the wheel wells and around the muffler cut-outs that one would expect.  It also has stress fractures around the rear hatch hinges and at one rear corner that are due mostly to being a 40 year old peice of fiberglass. However, the portion that consumed my weekend was the drivers side rear fender which (on the surface) doesn't seem too bad.


From the several layers of exposed fiberglass and bondo, and the various shades of primer and paint, it is obvious that there has been major work here in the past, but the shape appears to match the other side of the car and have all the right lines and curves. . .

Until you look at the back side of the panel . . .


For comparison, here is the passenger side. 


The black line in each photo is where the metal chasis mates with the fiberglass, and the grey part is that part of the body exposed to the wheel well.  Aside from the various bits of recycled blue plywood, cardboard, and metal riveted, screwed or otherwise attached to the panel in the upper photo, note that there is a very distinct reveal in the lower photo (near the bottom of the panel) that is missing in the upper photo.

Step one was to remove all the bits and appurtances and determine how bad the original break was.  This is where things started to head south.  After excavating approximately 3/8" into the back side of the panel through what was obviously field-applied fiberglass and body filler I encountered this:


Chicken wire! When fully exposed it looked like this:


Over a foot tall and at least that wide again at the top!  The question remained "where is the original fiberglass?"  So I kept grinding. 

I never did find it - which means someone refabricated this entire section of the body from scratch! 

As mentioned before, from the outside it looked accurate, but now knowing what I was seing I started to notice the small differences.  For instance, the reveal around the wheel arch seemed to be a thicker profile (it had to be to compensate for all that additional filler), and the reveal where the door panel overlaps the fender was only half the depth it should have been (no wonder the door wouldn't close!). 

After all the exploratory surgery was done, I ended up with a thin sheet of pure bondo that nevertheless still had roughly the correct shape on the exterior.


These are the piles of stuff that was removed.  (Well most of it.  There's probably that much dust again laying all over my shop now. . .)


This is what it looked like with a new layer of fiberglass installed.  The blue bits are painters tape showing through where my exploratory surgery got a bit too close to the surface or where rivets/screws pulled through from the original repair.  The large blue patch at bottom right is a piece of tape pulling the end cap into the correct position.


Time for a cold beer to give the new work time to set. . .  Which is when I got the second nasty surprise. 

This repair is by far the largest piece I've had to do to date, which means it's the largest batch of resin I've had to mix.  Apparently I got the percentages off by a bit.  Apparently a large bit.  After 4 hours it still was barely setting at all!  A consultation to my favorite search engine provided the consensus that the mix was probably a bit shy on activator, and it would eventually set.
 
Recommendations were to apply heat.  A propane torch appeared to do little except set fire to the surface if held too closely or too long a time in one spot, so that was quickly abandoned.  So (in spite the fact that it's summer, and 90 degrees F outside) I placed a space heater in front of the panel and waited another hour; which had no effect other than to raise the temperature of the shop to about 100 degrees F.  In disgust I closed down the shop for the night.

The next morning, there was still no progress, so I proceeded with sanding the rest of the rear body.  I also patched a structural tear on the same side where the window pillar joins the roof:

Before
After
After much sanding, the car is starting to look an almost uniform color.  (The dark bits are shadow lines).  I've still got some sanding to do at the front drainage tray, at the rear, and of course at the problem area.  I've also still got to patch up all those smaller blemishes noted earlier.  Still, a marked improvement! 


You'll note that the body is now back outside. The last tip for helping stubborn fiberglass resin to set is to expose the piece to direct sunlight where the UV rays can assist the heat in activating the curing process. Would you believe it worked? When I left for work this morning it was as sticky as ever, but when I got home, it was hard and dry!

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Lessons Learned

At this point I'm working toward the goal of making the car road worthy.  In most areas of the country that boils down to a relatively short list of items that must be present and working to pass inspection. 

One category of those things are working headlights, tail lights, stop lights, corner lights, turn signals, flashers, reverse lights, horn, and wipers - in other words a working electrical system.

While the wiring and connections are still (relatively) easy to get to I thought I'd tackle those items.

Of course, in typical fashion, when I started, not a single lamp was burning.  After a full day of sanding and cleaning contacts, checking and replacing bulbs, soldering loose splices, tidying up damaged wiring, replacing a rheostat, checking and rechecking voltage and resistance readings, trying to interpret incomprehensible wiring diagrams, etc.  I finally got all the lights going. 




There are still a few non-inspection items to resolve such as; interior lights (requires a new door contact switch), foot brake warning light (missing specialty warning display bulb, buzzer or modified connections to bypass a buzzer, and adjustment of the switch trip mechanism), antenna and radio connections, and accessory fog light installation.  I also need to replace the headlamps as one has a burned out low beam.

Here's where the lessons learned come in:
  • turn signals (flashers) don't work without a flasher unit
  • if a circuit is mislabeled, it won't ever do what you think it should
  • circuits with stuck switches may appear to be always on, but when you repair the switch unexpected things may happen
  • don't connect your cooling fans to the high beam circuit unless you plan to always drive with your high beams on
  • standard auxiliary lights on a Sonett only come on with the high beams (not sure how useful that is - I think I may change that arrangement)
  • some people will do creative things to avoid fixing electrical problems
  • some people who don't know better will unwittingly create a lot of electrical problems
(By the way, the horn, blower, washer fluid, and wiper circuits were already working; but like all the lights, they can't really be installed until the main body panels go back on.)

Which is a good segue into the next group of inspection items: a cabin sealed from the engine bay and exterior, and the presence of bumpers and mirrors.  For that, I need to finish the fiberglass repairs.  I will also need quite a few different assorted grommets, weatherstripping, and sealant products (which require placing several parts orders).

I uncovered the rear body of the car to take stock of the necessary repairs there (not pretty - more on that next post). 

I also installed new weatherstripping that will fit between the fiberglass body and the chassis.




This weatherstripping was a critical point of failure in the past and led to a lot of damage to the structural steel chassis.  Damaged/missing weatherstripping and poor fiberglass repairs left large gaps open in the wheel wells so that in wet weather water was thrown up by the tires into the interior where it pooled and rusted.

The new weatherstripping has a little bit longer profile to provide a better seal against the fiberglass body.  I will also be prepping the body carefully to ensure a smooth surface exists for the weatherstripping to seal against.