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5 GT Turbo 11 years later silver bullet comes home

Which battery tray option

  • Leave as is with battery tray sections

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Fully remove all spot welds and battery tray sections

    Votes: 1 100.0%
  • Leave battery tray in and trim/cut out sections not required to tidy

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    1
  • Poll closed .
Looks great mate, got that welder dialled in, bit easier on the thicker material isnt it.
Cheers @DaveL485 yep bit of thicker material is almost fun 😋
Finding running a bit hotter seems to suit me in general now but even on the thicker stuff blink and you have a hole lol, nice and easy to pull the torch back and let the wire fill the weld pool to fill back in though. Where any doubt go back in and zap it 😆

On the rtech mig180 for ref on the slightly thicker stuff running voltage 3-3.5 and wire speed 4-4.5 and find myself coming to the lower of the 2 when its got warm and bored of blasting it with air gun
 
General life, work and kids all getting ill as circulating the house has slowed down progress but even with the super heat had a few trips into garage

Oh and stole a day to collect my old race car....so of course started working on the also lol

Pics tell the story, the gift that keeps giving but one bit at a time and keep moving. Even drained the pit 😴

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Ok so with the recent heatwave it seemed only right to get some hours on the 5 and hrs and hrs it was 😀 damn it was silly hot 🔥🥵😜

But while im no professional happy enough it is solid and was worth the pain.....can sleep at night knowing ok

Some fun with new metal liking heat and orrible old French metal hates it, a very quick transition

Ended up kind of building the weld up on the fresh and then pulsing, moving the puddle onto old metal and in places pulsed v short burts if that makes sense???

Just for ref the guide holes for plugs goes upto 7mm and seems a good size

Next job back to rest of inner sill lol.....

Anyway some random pics

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I wouldn't strip what's sound if it's ok underneath, been there thirty odd years , done its job, my take is moisture gets in by other channels and the rot happens underneath it, when you can't see it happening until it's too late, it rarely rots outside in.
Up to you but if it's a shitter to get off ......therefore it's good, just patch repairs in, blow over good remainder, more important to drown cavities with wax and make sure it bleeds into all seams.
Just my two pennies.
 
Thanks @Turbell and advice welcomed as always 👍

Was a bit of a strange area in levels of rot v thinned out, and my plan is definitely try to leave what is good. Some bits in my pea brain made more sense to take a bit more out to get right....sure I will learn by repaur 297 on it 😅

Was really concerned inside was worse based on some of the bits found but was def better than hoped and satisfied to wire brush what I could, chuck in hydro80 and bit of zinc primer in there. Final step will be drowing it in cavity wax

In another 35 years its someone elses fun project to sort 🙃
 
It's always a compromise just how far you take it, paint systems and rust protection moved on in massive steps in the 80's, cars in the 60's and 70's were scabbing up after a couple of years, thin synthetic paint on edges combined with salty roads meant cars were getting blown in virtually from day one, earlier stuff survived better because they were made out of boiler plate!
I can fully understand dipping and such on a 60's E type etc, but on the stuff we're playing around with, if it's an area that has no seams and it's sound, doesn't peel, you're not removing it for weight reduction, then you're better off leaving it be ......you know where I'm coming from, and you're absolutely doing the right thing , in the right places in my opinion.
I don't run a successful restoration business, nor am I time served in any area of panel beating, welding or painting, purely based on my experience ( help from trusted sources ) and seeing other people's work years after it was done, but if it's rusty, crusty or flakey, it comes off, replaced or cleaned bright metal, treated , etched , sealed and cavity waxed......what happens after that is down to how the car is used and stored.
 
Had cleaned steel and maybe to do with inside? It did get a dose of wire brush where I could and plentry of hydro80

Maybe it was just me lol 😆
 
Pushing on with an hr or 2 where I can, not the greatest way to make quick progress but is better than none and proper enjoying it 👍

Took over an hr odd Sunday to just make inner sill and weld tab on....the shame

Seems.....well everything eats hrs of time which feels like 10 mins

Tonight spent 15 mins playing with spot welder but was not playing booooo

Resorted to drill holes to plug weld and finish inner ready to weld in only gas showing zero cant make it up and so order refill tomorrow and gave garage a clean up

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