In my quest to restore a Spider that had no business being restored I finally got to the point where I had to tackle a fender replacement. Once the paint was removed I saw that the car was once in a nice accident and the front fender was very poorly repaired and the only real fix was to transplant a new fender from my parts car.
Boys and girls let me tell you; this is not a fun or easy job. I wonder why Fiat chose to weld the fender on as opposed to bolt on like every other car that I have worked on. Removing the damaged fender was not a hard chore because it was not installed correctly, taking the fender off the parts car was about a three hour job with a plasma cutter a sharp spot weld cutter and a lot of hand tools. For whatever reason Fiat decided to sandwich the fender mounting flange in between two other pieces of structural metal! Once I had the fender removed, stripped and the backside cleaned, coated with POR15 and bed liner I thought the hard part was over.. WRONG!! Having a fender welded in place means that once I mount it, it’s there for good so the fender has to line up with the hood and the cowl and the door before I make a single tack. I spent two weeks fitting and adjusting the front end to achieve acceptable body gaps. Apparently the accident and having body parts from multiple cars made the Fiat gods angry because I ended up cutting, grinding and welding the hood hinges and moving the new fender a good 1/4 inch towards the hood to get gaps that were between 1/8 and 1/4 inch all around. I finally figured that a 25 year old car would never be perfect so I settled on gaps I could live with, blew the car apart and began re-welding on the new fender. So far I have only burned through the lousy metal in three places.
So.....my “rolling restoration” has been on a rotisserie for almost 2 years, has a “new” body that ended up being as bad or worse than the original car, new floors from halfway up the firewall to mid way under the rear seat including a new trans tunnel, a new fender, (soon) two new rear fender arches, multiple replacement panels on or around the rockers, oh and I just discovered some hidden rust lurking on the driver shock tower.
In summary I have lost my garage, the neighbors are pissed because I still have a parts car in the driveway, my wife is plotting a small garage fire so she can get her husband back, I have easily spent more on this project than it would have cost to buy a REAL nice southern rust free, car. I guess the moral of my story is I STILL OVE THIS CAR! The friends I have made in the Chi-FLU chapter, the conversations that have been started with complete strangers that see me wrenching and the respect that I get from friends and neighbors that slowly see a car being assembled in my garage make it all worth it………….so far!!!
The Saga Continues
- TulsaSpider
- Posts: 1547
- Joined: Tue Apr 29, 2008 7:33 pm
- Your car is a: 1978 Spyder 124 2L
- Location: Tulsa, Ok
Re: The Saga Continues
Just keep swimming- swimming -swimming!
- engineerted
- Posts: 531
- Joined: Tue Feb 21, 2006 9:57 pm
- Your car is a: 1974 124 spider
- Location: Farmington Hills, MI
Re: The Saga Continues
Keep the faith! It is worth it in the end. It took me 3-1/2 years to do the same thing you are doing. I had to replace both shock towers, rear arches (inner and outer) all four corners of the inner rocker panels, floor pan, replace both doors and the rear deck lid.
Ted
Ted
Ted
1978 124 Spider, Complete Restoration
1974 Fiat 124 F Production Race car
1978 124 Spider, Complete Restoration
1974 Fiat 124 F Production Race car
Re: The Saga Continues
WOW - way beyond my abilities. Cant wait to see pics of the final project.
- wachuko
- Posts: 1175
- Joined: Thu Feb 04, 2010 10:56 pm
- Your car is a: 1981 Fiat 2000 Spider
- Location: Orlando, FL USA
- Contact:
Re: The Saga Continues
You Sir, are among family and friends here. We understand.
-
- Posts: 5754
- Joined: Wed Jan 25, 2006 5:49 am
- Your car is a: 1972 Fiat 124 Sport
- Location: Winston-Salem, NC
Re: The Saga Continues
Oh my Gawd! I feel your pain...I'll also be available to share a ceremonial celebration drink when it's all complete and you have it at the next FFO!
1972 124 Spider (Don)
1971 124 Spider (Juan)
1986 Bertone X19 (Blue)
1978 124 Spider Lemons racer
1974 X19 SCCA racer (Paul)
2012 500 Prima Edizione #19 (Mini Rossa)
Ever changing count of parts cars....It's a disease!
1971 124 Spider (Juan)
1986 Bertone X19 (Blue)
1978 124 Spider Lemons racer
1974 X19 SCCA racer (Paul)
2012 500 Prima Edizione #19 (Mini Rossa)
Ever changing count of parts cars....It's a disease!
Re: The Saga Continues
At this rate I am confident that I will be in attendance at the 2020 FFO!!
-
- Posts: 3959
- Joined: Sat Dec 27, 2008 2:14 am
- Your car is a: 1980 124 spider
- Location: Naramata B.C.
Re: The Saga Continues
My friend you have WAY more patence and perseverance that I could ever muster. Way to go and good luck. I can just wish the better half appreciates the effort as well.
80 FI spider
72 work in progress
2017 Golf R ( APR Stg. 1)
2018 F350 crew long box
72 work in progress
2017 Golf R ( APR Stg. 1)
2018 F350 crew long box
Re: The Saga Continues
Wow!! I wish you would of posted that 6 months ago. That's when I decided to take on my restoration. Fortunately, my biggest PITA will be replacing the RF fender (with a fiberglass one). I start cutting on Sunday. I already feel your pain. And, no, it makes no sense at all as to how Fiat originally installed these fenders. How bizarre, how bizarre.
But as the hippies said back in the 60's: the trip IS the trip. And keep on truckin'.
But as the hippies said back in the 60's: the trip IS the trip. And keep on truckin'.