Sport Coupe Restoration Thread:
Posted: Tue Aug 17, 2010 4:55 am
Unless there are objections to my chronicling the restoration of my '72 BC Coupe here on Fiat SPIDER .com, I'd like to do so here in this thread. I am not an expert car restorer. I'll need the help of many forum contributors to do this right. I've come to feel quite comfortable within this forum, and the level of knowledge here is second to none about the 124 series of Fiat. That said, don't be too hard on me...
So far, I've removed the carpet & jute type padding from the car's floor after also removing its seats. The floor is perfect. It's tar coating was separating from the metal on the passenger's side, but is in very good to perfect condition everywhere else on the interior floor pans. Since this is the case, should I leave it as such, and apply bed liner to the passenger's foot well where the original tar had begun to separate from the pan? This seems the way to go to me, but I'd like other people's thoughts on it.
I've dyed the car's carpet back to black from its faded green color and though it's not perfect, it'll be just fine for now. Even the padding between the carpet and tar coat on the floor pans is in good re-usable shape. I'm not going for a concourse restoration, but is it a bad idea to simply put this carpet padding back where I found it, or use some of the foil type wrapping shown recently in the floor pan restoration thread? I'm inclined to just put the original padding back in place, but I'm all about the preservation of the car.
As per the floor pan restoration thread, I've begun the undercoating of the car's underside starting with its wheel wells. I've finished the front two wheel wells. I started by spraying them liberally with brake cleaner to get the filth off. They were actually pretty clean, and there were only very minor amounts of surface rust here and there. After the brake cleaner came the Simple Green, and after that came the Ospho, which is a rust reversing chemical compound. It's nasty stuff, but the results are very good. After spraying Ospho on and letting it dry, the wheel wells got a coating of rubberized undercoating, just less than one full can per fender well area. I was thorough, and no areas were missed. I was glad to see that there was no rust-through in the battery box, which bulges into the right front fender well of the Coupe. Nice.
Next the floor pans get this same series of steps. So far I've seen no metal that needs to be replaced.
I removed the car's front bumper tonight, partly because I prefer the look of un-bumpered 124s (my Spider AS is also without bumpers). I also wanted to do some preliminary body work on the left front fender while I was messing around in the wheel wells. There is some light to moderate collision damage, most of which was taken by the bumper which fared pretty well considering the impact it took. Unlike my Spider, I had the bumper off the Coupe in 5 or so minutes.
I used a small scissor jack that I wedged between the inner fender well, and the outer fender well's damaged portion to push out the worst parts of the damage. The results were better than I expected them to be. I have zero training in bodywork, but my experience puts me somewhere between novice and intermediate. I'll try to post some before & after photos of both the fender wells, and the fender.
Bumper off, "before" pic of left fender damage
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here's the "After" pic of the preliminary bodywork on the fender:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper 2 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is the "Before" pic of what I'm pretty sure is the passenger's side fender well:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper 10 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is the "After" pic of the passenger's side fender well (That's not my Bondo in the background):
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Here is the "Before" pic of the driver's side fender well (almost forgot to document it):
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper 7 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is the "After" pic of the driver's side fender well:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat coupe undercoating & bumper 6 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is a "Before" pic of the carpet:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Here is an "After" shot of the car's carpet:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe Floor Pans 12 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
fiat coupe floor pans 5 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Below is the condition of the driver's foot well: The tan fuzzy stuff is the residual floor padding fuzz atop a perfectly intact layer of factory tar. Note the condition of the carpet padding at the top of the pic, it's all in that condition,
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
fiat coupe floor pans 1 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Below is a "Before" pic of the passenger's footwell: The surface rust is not as extensive as it seems from this shot. The only surface rust that is attached to the metal is on the upper vertical part of the fender well. I didn't get a shot of it yet, but this area cleaned up quite well with some Ospho and a cup brush on an angle grinder
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
fiat coupe floor pans 2 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Below is a pic of my car that I snapped as I was walking toward it with keys in hand after paying $1500 for it:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Trip with Jeff 7 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
I'm doing all this in my brother's garage while he works on his 850 Spider next to me. He's slowly paying me back for the car, and his wife and kids say that the Spider has given him a renewed enthusiasm for being alive. It's been cool spending the time with my brother, who is smarter, and in all honesty a better mechanic than I am. My biggest contribution to the Fiat Garage is my verve, vision and tenacity.
So far, I've removed the carpet & jute type padding from the car's floor after also removing its seats. The floor is perfect. It's tar coating was separating from the metal on the passenger's side, but is in very good to perfect condition everywhere else on the interior floor pans. Since this is the case, should I leave it as such, and apply bed liner to the passenger's foot well where the original tar had begun to separate from the pan? This seems the way to go to me, but I'd like other people's thoughts on it.
I've dyed the car's carpet back to black from its faded green color and though it's not perfect, it'll be just fine for now. Even the padding between the carpet and tar coat on the floor pans is in good re-usable shape. I'm not going for a concourse restoration, but is it a bad idea to simply put this carpet padding back where I found it, or use some of the foil type wrapping shown recently in the floor pan restoration thread? I'm inclined to just put the original padding back in place, but I'm all about the preservation of the car.
As per the floor pan restoration thread, I've begun the undercoating of the car's underside starting with its wheel wells. I've finished the front two wheel wells. I started by spraying them liberally with brake cleaner to get the filth off. They were actually pretty clean, and there were only very minor amounts of surface rust here and there. After the brake cleaner came the Simple Green, and after that came the Ospho, which is a rust reversing chemical compound. It's nasty stuff, but the results are very good. After spraying Ospho on and letting it dry, the wheel wells got a coating of rubberized undercoating, just less than one full can per fender well area. I was thorough, and no areas were missed. I was glad to see that there was no rust-through in the battery box, which bulges into the right front fender well of the Coupe. Nice.
Next the floor pans get this same series of steps. So far I've seen no metal that needs to be replaced.
I removed the car's front bumper tonight, partly because I prefer the look of un-bumpered 124s (my Spider AS is also without bumpers). I also wanted to do some preliminary body work on the left front fender while I was messing around in the wheel wells. There is some light to moderate collision damage, most of which was taken by the bumper which fared pretty well considering the impact it took. Unlike my Spider, I had the bumper off the Coupe in 5 or so minutes.
I used a small scissor jack that I wedged between the inner fender well, and the outer fender well's damaged portion to push out the worst parts of the damage. The results were better than I expected them to be. I have zero training in bodywork, but my experience puts me somewhere between novice and intermediate. I'll try to post some before & after photos of both the fender wells, and the fender.
Bumper off, "before" pic of left fender damage
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here's the "After" pic of the preliminary bodywork on the fender:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper 2 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is the "Before" pic of what I'm pretty sure is the passenger's side fender well:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper 10 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is the "After" pic of the passenger's side fender well (That's not my Bondo in the background):
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Here is the "Before" pic of the driver's side fender well (almost forgot to document it):
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe undercoating & bumper 7 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is the "After" pic of the driver's side fender well:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat coupe undercoating & bumper 6 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Here is a "Before" pic of the carpet:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Here is an "After" shot of the car's carpet:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Coupe Floor Pans 12 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
fiat coupe floor pans 5 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Below is the condition of the driver's foot well: The tan fuzzy stuff is the residual floor padding fuzz atop a perfectly intact layer of factory tar. Note the condition of the carpet padding at the top of the pic, it's all in that condition,
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
fiat coupe floor pans 1 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Below is a "Before" pic of the passenger's footwell: The surface rust is not as extensive as it seems from this shot. The only surface rust that is attached to the metal is on the upper vertical part of the fender well. I didn't get a shot of it yet, but this area cleaned up quite well with some Ospho and a cup brush on an angle grinder
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
fiat coupe floor pans 2 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
Below is a pic of my car that I snapped as I was walking toward it with keys in hand after paying $1500 for it:
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/thech ... .jpg[/img]
Fiat Trip with Jeff 7 by thechadzone, on Flickr[/url]
I'm doing all this in my brother's garage while he works on his 850 Spider next to me. He's slowly paying me back for the car, and his wife and kids say that the Spider has given him a renewed enthusiasm for being alive. It's been cool spending the time with my brother, who is smarter, and in all honesty a better mechanic than I am. My biggest contribution to the Fiat Garage is my verve, vision and tenacity.