Home  |  Forums  |  914 Info  |  Blogs
 
914World.com - The fastest growing online 914 community!
 
Porsche, and the Porsche crest are registered trademarks of Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG. This site is not affiliated with Porsche in any way.
Its only purpose is to provide an online forum for car enthusiasts. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.
 

Welcome Guest ( Log In | Register )

> Spent a week with my 914..., Windscreen is in.
Rick_Eberle
post Aug 8 2004, 11:26 PM
Post #1


Member
**

Group: Members
Posts: 390
Joined: 14-January 04
From: Geelong, Australia
Member No.: 1,558



So I spent a week working on the car, and I have to tell you, I forgot how COLD it could be in my home town, Geelong. In the time I was there, I don’t think it got above 12°C. I don’t know what that is in Fahrenheit, but it was bloody cold! I was having to wait hours, sometimes overnight, before I could sand bondo! The paint that I sprayed on just sat there in little droplets on the metal, and would hardly flow. I ended up having to heat everything up with a hair dryer just to be able to work.

I didn’t try to start the car this time, because I really wanted to concentrate on the windscreen frame, and getting the screen in. Of course, “while I was there” I figured I’d try to clean up the dash a little, and I spent way too much time filling the seams between the fenders and the… the… what do you call the panel between the windscreen and the front trunk??? Anyway, I filled those seams. I also fixed the broken hinge pin in the front trunk.

The bumpers are off, and at some point will need re-chroming. My one perfect panel, the rear bumper is looking a little worse for wear after three years in storage, not to mention that little ocean voyage. The chrome is actually peeling off in spots.

The windscreen frame had a little rust, but nothing that went through, so it was just a matter of using a wire brush and some rust converter on it. I had the strangest thing on the driver’s side of the frame, though. I stripped it all down, primed it, used spray putty to get a really smooth finish, and painted it, (a really nice bright white). All good, except for one little patch where little bubbles formed in the paint. No biggie, I’ll just sand it down, more spray putty, and paint again. Same thing! OK, I’ll strip that area down to bare metal, and start again. Same thing, in only that spot! Stripped back again, more bubbles (only in the top coat, not the primer!) So finally I just put a thin film of bondo over the paint, primed and painted again, and no problem. I just hope I never get a stone-chip in that area, because it’s pretty thick!

I bought a windscreen fitting kit from Automobile Atlanta, so I had all new trim clips, and a big roll of butyl-rubber tape to stick it down. That had to be heated up too. The windscreen arrived in six days – from Germany! When I ordered it, they said that the only legal windscreen available for Australia was toughened glass (yuck), but what came in the box was laminated. I think that when they brought out two 914’s to test the market in 1970 screens here had to be toughened.

I also bought new chrome trims for the screen, as some of mine were bent or missing. Of course they look so good that now I’m going to have to replace ALL the trim pieces!

The rest of the time was spent going over the car for any small dents that needed filling or beating – one above the right rear wheel popped straight out with just a bit of levering with a piece of wood.

I also removed and filled the side indicators at the front. I always thought they were kind of ugly, and I don't need them here in Australia

Pics to follow...

Rick
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post

Posts in this topic


Reply to this topicStart new topic
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:

 



- Lo-Fi Version Time is now: 23rd May 2024 - 02:03 AM