ok, I did the passenger side floor pan today after I got off work, before sundown(need more lights in the garage), removed all the tar(about 2 1/2 hours, a heat gun and a putty knife)
there is some funky "glue" looking stuff under the tar paper... what gets this off? aircraft paint stripper did nothing to it...
there is a little rust along the horizontal support... where the tar met the weld... the area is very small, and doesn't extend "up" onto the cross piece... how should I fix this? I'm thinking of rust killer, and then weld in a little angle-piece for extra support... is this ok, or do I need to cut all of this and weld in a new piece ?
here are a few pics, there are more in the BLOG, please give me your opinions...
yes, I finally started to use the BLOG as my progress documentation... I have been assimilated...
ahhhhh! flassh backkkkssss! Try a little torch and scraper action on that glue.
OUCHHHHHHHH
BTDT!!!!!!
Flash back is soooo right for me also.
You get a smiley for that one
Attached image(s)
That rust looks a little nasty to me. Do yourself a favor (it won't seem like it at first, but you'll thank me later) and start digging into that rust with a grinder a large 4" wire brush. Dig in there good and hard. Get it all out and then post some pics. You'll probably find that it extends further than you think. Get it all out and then repair it.
That glue is a royal PITA. I let the acid dipo take care of it on my tub.
QUOTE (Gint @ May 6 2005, 08:13 AM) |
That rust looks a little nasty to me. Do yourself a favor (it won't seem like it at first, but you'll thank me later) and start digging into that rust with a grinder a large 4" wire brush. Dig in there good and hard. Get it all out and then post some pics. You'll probably find that it extends further than you think. Get it all out and then repair it. That glue is a royal PITA. I let the acid dipo take care of it on my tub. |
Wayne,
I am in the same situation with my car... While you are at it, it is time to clean out the center tunnel. Dont pass the oppurtunity to do it now - you will be amazed at how much crap is in there - use a shop vac!
As far as the glue goes, it take a combination of things... Angle grinder w/4" cup brush, acetone, Por -15 cleaner, Por-15 metal ready, angle grinder with 4" cup...
You get the idea -
Thom
yea, I should have done the center tunnel last year before installing the new engine... I had planning on the car beconming a driving-resto, but that didn't happen...
other than the front and rear access panels(which I don't have covers for ) what is the best way to get in there?
also, can the fuel lines be changed with the engine in? I figure while I'm in there... may as well. I'll also change the accel and clutch cables and fix any broke cable holds...
on the drivers side... does the pedal cluster need to be removed to get all the shitty tar up?
I had a 30 minute discussion with my wife last night... even she can't understand why they would put something semi-porus down as a protectant... knowing rust could occur... I just said "well, they weren't thinking 30 years ahead, I guess" although I really only see rust on the one edge... so, I'm not complaining... I've heard the stories of pulling up the tar and the metal coming too... in rust flakes
I have your thread bookmarked, im in the same boat as you. Getting ready to replace my floorpans hopefully this next week.
Not to steal your thunder here, but when welding in the new pans, do you just stich weld every so often, or weld all the way around??? I'm jumping the gun a bit, I still have to get my tar up at the seams first.
My center tunnel looks good on the outside, but I will probably find some nastiness on the inside hidden away. Will need to invest in some metal ready and POR15. I already have the wire brushes in anticipation.
QUOTE (Verruckt @ May 6 2005, 08:54 AM) |
I have your thread bookmarked, im in the same boat as you. Getting ready to replace my floorpans hopefully this next week. Not to steal your thunder here, but when welding in the new pans, do you just stich weld every so often, or weld all the way around??? I'm jumping the gun a bit, I still have to get my tar up at the seams first. My center tunnel looks good on the outside, but I will probably find some nastiness on the inside hidden away. Will need to invest in some metal ready and POR15. I already have the wire brushes in anticipation. |
QUOTE (tat2dphreak @ May 6 2005, 09:00 AM) |
I'm also taking a welding class presently, to get to know these things better... |
QUOTE (spare time toys @ May 6 2005, 09:10 AM) | ||
Where are you doing the class at? Do they teach tig? I was hoping to pick that up at work but one of the guys zapped himself good when he touched the electrode to the tip so they went back to just the one old guy doing it. |
is tar under the pedal cluster?
if I have to remove the pedal cluster, perhaps I need to call on my good friend Eric Shea... while it's out...
QUOTE (tat2dphreak @ May 6 2005, 06:45 AM) |
also, can the fuel lines be changed with the engine in? |
QUOTE |
on the drivers side... does the pedal cluster need to be removed to get all the shitty tar up? |
is that what i think it is ???? ( a rusted through center tunnel ) ...
Andy
Attached image(s)
QUOTE (tat2dphreak @ May 6 2005, 08:45 AM) |
yea, I should have done the center tunnel last year before installing the new engine... I had planning on the car beconming a driving-resto, but that didn't happen... other than the front and rear access panels(which I don't have covers for :rolleyes: ) what is the best way to get in there? |
QUOTE (SirAndy @ May 6 2005, 04:02 PM) |
is that what i think it is ???? ( a rusted through center tunnel ) ... Andy |
QUOTE (dakotaewing @ May 6 2005, 04:10 PM) | ||
Wayne, I reomoved EVERYTHING in my tunnel, and then stuck a shop vac in where the shifter bolts down, and then went in on the front end with the pedal cluster and all the cables removed. It's a lot more work, but its is a lot easier to get it cleaned out - TE |
QUOTE (tat2dphreak @ May 6 2005, 04:14 PM) | ||||
ok, the only thing I didn't do was take the cables out... I vaccuumed once in there already... pretty clean... |
no, it will get the OSPHO treatment with everything else...
ok, I worked on the "back" part of the passenger floor pan... not looking great back there, but not terrible... both seat hinge spots are rusted, the PO welded one side of the seat rail brackets down, so THAT wasn't good...
I did grind along the edge of the spot I found yesterday... it is solid right up to the edge... so there's SOME good news... but I want to fix it right... the back side of that metal piece had some surface rust, but it brushed up good... I am going to get a different brush attachment... right now I am using a 2" brush on my drill... I am going to get one for the angle grinder...
I hadn't realized that the center tunnel had tar paper on as well...so that isn't going to be fun... what do you guys think about turning on a halogen lamp and leave it pointing at the center tunnel for a few hours to warm that stuff up good... safe?
anyway, more pics from the blog:
btw, the blog is a great workaround for posting multiple pics!! thanks admins!
next week I'll work on stripping the center and the driver's side... too bad I'm going out of town this weekend...
is there anything you guys see in the pics that I should check on?
I double checked the spot Andy pointed out... that seems good, the tar is still there and all of the tarhad a nasty carpt glued to it... think astroturf... it was very similar to what you would put on a deck... if your deck was attached to a double-wide trailer...
You're doing fine. Get yourself a heat gun. That tar comes right off after it's heated a little. Even on the center tunnel. A heat lamp would work, but it's only gonna heat up a small area at a time and take a while to do each area.
Hey Wayne,
Did you find something to clean up the residue from the tar paper yet? If not then use brake cleaner aerosol, it's the secret weapon of 914 restorers everywhere.
So far it's looking pretty good.
Jon
I have been using a heat gun, but it only does a small area, I thought the halogen would do more space and I could leave it while working on something else...
heat+wirebrush on drill was getting up the glue, but I ALWAYS like to use chemicalsto help cut the manual part.. I'll try brake ceaner! thanks!
thanks for the encouragement!! once I get the tar off I'll start cutting away the rust and see where it leads... does the rust look BAD? repairable?
QUOTE (tat2dphreak @ May 7 2005, 05:06 AM) |
repairable? |
Oh, and a propane torch will put out more heat than a heat gun so you can cover larger areas at a time. It also will ignite the tar so that's a bonus for most guys. Keep a damp rag nearby.
Plus it's hard to get the smell to totally permeate the whole house unless you use the torch. Gotta make sure the whole family shares in the experience.
i agree with the propane torch..ive been using it to strip everything...works really really well
my torch is a cheapo... the kind that just attaches to a bottle... it goes out when you turn it upside down... I tried it first, but it kept going out... :|
I don't care about the smell... my garage is detached... the whole neighborhood can smell it for all I give a damn about!
thanks guys... I appreciate the BTDT experience...
QUOTE (tat2dphreak @ May 7 2005, 05:06 AM) |
I'll try brake ceaner! |
great!! I'll pick up a case of brake cleaner then...
question: was there tar on the cross-member? there doesn't SEEM to be on mine... just paint/carpet glue(to hold down the trailer carpet this car used to have)...
Hey Wayne,
Not sure if you got an answer yet, but as I recall the tar mat does NOT extend underneath the pedal cluster.
But I would take it out anyway as rust likes to live under there and you will want to POR that area as well. Besides it not really all that difficult and it will help with the center tunnel clean out.
lookin good. I did the same thing last summer.
Oh yeah, my cheapo propane torch did the trick with that sealer.
later
QUOTE (jr91472 @ May 8 2005, 09:04 PM) |
Hey Wayne, Not sure if you got an answer yet, but as I recall the tar mat does NOT extend underneath the pedal cluster. But I would take it out anyway as rust likes to live under there and you will want to POR that area as well. Besides it not really all that difficult and it will help with the center tunnel clean out. lookin good. I did the same thing last summer. Oh yeah, my cheapo propane torch did the trick with that sealer. later |
QUOTE (tat2dphreak @ May 8 2005, 06:07 PM) |
why does my torch go out when it's upside down?!?! I have barely used it since replacing the bottle... |
QUOTE (SirAndy @ May 7 2005, 11:55 AM) | ||
as for the seat brackets, they're available NEW ... get yourself a spot-weld drilbit and drill the old ones out, clean up the floor board, then weld new ones in. BTDT Andy |
QUOTE (jr91472 @ May 8 2005, 06:14 PM) | ||
I got nothing |
ok, little more progress today...
I got a small butane torch to get up close and personal with the tar... worked great!!
then I soaked up some glue with brake cleaner and a rag... it too worked great...
then, my mind shut off and I did something stupid... I was going to back to torching the tar... BUT I didn't wash the clean floor pan with water after using the brake cleaner... it burst into flanes singing the hair on my arm and catching a shop rag(soaked with brake cleaner) on fire in the pan... I put the fire out quickly(had the extinguisher close already)... no damage was done, but I wasted most of the rest of the day cleaning up the fire ex. residue
yes, I know, it was DUMB!! I was lucky no one or nothing was hurt... I have pics(not of the fire or what I had to clean up, I was too pissed at myself), I'll post them soon...
ok picture time:
does brake cleaner work? damn straight it does!
BEFORE:
AFTER:
how much of the sealer that is still there do I need to get up?
a better pic of where the rusted out hinge was... I plan to cut part of the pan out here too and weld in a new piece of sheet metal...
cleaned under the wiring harness by loosening it and lifting it up long enough to torch/putty knife under...
last pic: a little surface rust where the seat belt attachment was all the rust I found today... I'll treat this and it is still solid...
nothing to add today, took the day off and saw hitchhiker's guide...
looking good!!!
we have all done stupid things, the point is: how do you handle the situation......good call on the fire ex.
lol, yea... I bought 2 more extinguishers... just in case!
ok, tar and glue up... I started working on the sealant and brushing those rusty spots up...
a few bad things:
1)pedal cluster looks like crap... Eric will be getting a PM from me VERY soon...
2) I checked the ball joints, one doesn't look bad, but the rubber seemed a little dry, the other is seperated though...
3) the rust on the center cross brace is not good, the edge on the drivers and passenger side looks very much bad... you'll see pics where I went at it with a wire brush on my angle grinder... how should I fix this? cut out and weld in new pieces? are new pieces even available? where? how much $$?
4) found another spot of rustiness... in the corner by the firewall... how do I fix this?
I stopped for a while to eat lunch and I'll go back and grind more later, when it cools off some... today is a record high for May! 97 degress, NO wind and high humidity!!
that corner looks bad but away from the corner is only some surface rust...
the "seat side" of the center brace
the "front side"
more pics in the blog... but nothing pretty :|
update, I'm not going to make it back to the garage yet... it broke triple digits here... still humid and muggy
so, is killing the rust and then putting sheet metal braces a good plan for that corner? cross-brace?
do I have to cut out the cross brace?
I spoke with Dave @ GPR and he has those parts (back piece, and center brace). My rust was pretty much exactly like yours. I'm just going to replace them rather than fight with them. I tried several times to get a hold of Resto Design but havent been successful... I'm going to replace my floors too. Somewhere along the line, someone jacked up the car via the floorpans Could be hobbled back somewhat into its original shape with a BFH, but I want it to be "nice". Besides, that cutoff tool is so damn cool
my floors them selves are fine... I just din't want the added expense of replacing the parts with exact matches... they won't be seen once the carpet and interior are put back in...
after a nice visit with James Adams today, I think I have a plan:
I plan to use some angle cut steel for the cross piece... I may cut the bottom of this off to be sure and treat under it with ospho...
then I plan a temp fix of the corner... until next year, when I'll weld in the correct pieces, and probably an engman chassis kit...
is this a sound plan? or am I making things harder to save a few bucks?
ok, so I got home early today, ready to go at it, it's a great day weather-wise, it rained earlier so it was almost "cool" (80s, compared to hi 90s), even got my rebuilt pedal assembly from Eric in the mail! perfect right? well, almost... I get home, and look for the garage opener... it's in my daily driver... problem is: I dropped that POS off at the shop today to get a tune up and have them check out why it's idling rough, before I take it out of town this weekend... and the shop didn't get around to it today so, here I am, perfect day to be in the garage, and no way in hell to get into the fucker!! the apartments only issue one opener, and they don't have another way in.. so I'm here: when I should be:
ok, I've got ALMOST all of the seam sealer crap off... how much do I really NEED to remove? all thats left is some hard to reach spots up under the driver's side dash... no rust has been under any of it...
also, there *WERE* 2 black plastic screw looking things near the center tunnel in the back... I THOUGHT these were metal and was cleaning the sealant from around them... they got chewed the fuck up and are no longer with us... what was the purpose of these? and can I just put a bolt in their place?
one more thing... there seems to be some dents and dings inside the door(inner long)... semi-normal? need to be fixed?
I think this is the first thing I am going to do when I bring Bruenhilda home. I have thought about doing it several times and just never got around to it (like many things in life).
This is /very/ helpful and I will be looking at it a lot over the coming months.
Pray (to whatever god(s) you wish or exert your will or what have you) for me that the place where my drivers side seat punched through the floor (inboard rear) is the only real rust I have (I know it won't be, but I can hope).
Thanks for the valuable blog - I will try and do the same when I get my project started.
God DAMN I love this site!
thanks yes, so far I've done everything bass-ackwards... I got the engine in and running, then started on the brakes, and then the rust, but now I realize that I have to pull the engine out again, for a few things I forgot(didn't know about)... crank free-play, engine tin seals, flapper pieces... you know, little stuff that keeps the engine together!
I never understood the point in the blog until I used it...
yes, this site is great... I look at at it as hanging out with friends, even when I'm at work... the people on this site have taught me more than anyone could ever imagine... there's 1000+ years of experience for a 30 year old car on this site...
Wayne, are you planning on having you car at the http://www.pca.org/914/MUSR7ad.html in Granbury? That my target. But I have a lot more work to put into the car. I am watching your progress on the floor pans. Keep on plugin' away.
if all goes well... if I would finish a project or 2 before adding another, it would definately make it... I'm signed up either way, I'm hoping the car comes with me... under it's own power...
Brought back alot of memories for me as well. I didn't encounter so much the tar paper and goo stuff, but the PO sure liked to use fibreglass. Had to grind all of that stuff out and was lucky to only have the front outside wheelwell/floor area slightly rusted. Will be cutting out that metal and forming new then going to town with the MIG. On a positive note the underside of the body was completely wirebrushed after the fibreglassed rockers and (mostly missing) longitudinals were replaced with new parts. Whole underside was then painted in epoxy primer. Work is now progressing topside in the cabin. Gotta kick my son's right hand drive Honda off my two poster to get moving again.
QUOTE (Quadlinear @ Jun 30 2005, 09:37 PM) |
Brought back alot of memories for me as well. I didn't encounter so much the tar paper and goo stuff, but the PO sure liked to use fibreglass. Had to grind all of that stuff out and was lucky to only have the front outside wheelwell/floor area slightly rusted. Will be cutting out that metal and forming new then going to town with the MIG. On a positive note the underside of the body was completely wirebrushed after the fibreglassed rockers and (mostly missing) longitudinals were replaced with new parts. Whole underside was then painted in epoxy primer. Work is now progressing topside in the cabin. Gotta kick my son's right hand drive Honda off my two poster to get moving again. |
a little progress today... I know it's almost nothing, but at least it's baby steps:
all engine seals are in, the clutch,Press. Plate are back in place, cables and pedal cluster is in, the rust holes in the long have been cut out,
oh, and the dash is painted... hammerite silver!
that's actually been done for a while, but I went over it a couple times to make it as best I could...
I need to get some sheet metal to fix these 2 parts:
they are still solid though... which is good...
new pedal cluster from Mr. Shea!!
too bad it looks like a 4 ct diamond in a pile of shit right now... great workmanship on the cluster... anyone who doubts if the $$ is worth it for Eric's stuf... let me tell you! IT'S worth MORE!
What are you doing with the dash? Leaving it all metal? covering parts of it? What's the plan? That silver looks very clean.
QUOTE (MW 914 @ Jul 15 2005, 06:13 PM) |
What are you doing with the dash? Leaving it all metal? covering parts of it? What's the plan? That silver looks very clean. |
The reflection is going to bug the crap out of you in about 5min on the first sunny day. Ask me how I know...
I'm going to pull my dash this weekend and re-do it all again. The glue I used has tuned to crap and is starting to peel up. Bastards at the paint store LIED to me...can you believe that shit!
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