BUILD-OFF CHALLENGE: Dirty Cossack's Build |
|
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. |
|
BUILD-OFF CHALLENGE: Dirty Cossack's Build |
JoeDees |
Sep 30 2015, 07:40 PM
Post
#1
|
Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 515 Joined: 10-November 14 From: Northern Kentucky Member No.: 18,106 Region Association: None |
I had every intention of making an introduction video, but I found that I had ruined my wide angle lens trying to film some cool shots of grinding. So while I'm waiting for the new lens to be delivered, I will go with this novel:
I bought the car about a year ago with the shortsighted intention of throwing it back together and having a driver until its turn came for rustoration. I bought the car and a carload of parts from a guy in Dallas who did some really shady work and an incredible job hiding other rust; magician style he distracted with his obvious poor work. The drivetrain was out of the car and registration said it had been sitting for 12 years, so I don’t know what made me think I could get it driving in a month… Soon after buying the car, my daily driver VW went down and needed a bunch of work and Uncle Sam gave me orders to move 800 miles. I fiddled with the 914 now and then, mostly just probing for rust, but focused my attention on prepping my other projects and VW for sale, knowing I could only bring one car with me and it had to be rolling so I couldn’t really tear into it. I’ve been here in the new, much smaller shop since June and have been slowly tearing into the 914 between honey-do new house projects, new job training, and getting the new shop in order. As we sit now, the car is on jackstands with the rotisserie acting as additional bracing, the engine and trans are under a workbench, the bigger pieces of the car are using the extra bedroom (the one my wife says needs to be vacated when we get pregnant) and others in boxes in my closet. Tearing the car down, I’ve found almost everything worse than I expected. The gas tank is pretty nasty with rust, all 4 calipers are locked up and the wheel bearing grease congealed. Removing the bumpers I found some evidence of prior damage and filler. Further probes into the longs found some rust on the driver side, and the passenger side nearly shot. The hellhole was a known problem, and turned into a chasm. I haven’t really dove to much into the floor, but found rust around the firewall and under a seat mount. The good news seems to be in a relatively dry trunk and pedal area. My project’s Big 5 jobs are: 1) Rust repair. 2) Body work and a complete repaint. 3) Complete overhaul of the brake system, bearings, CVs, getting the window to work and stuff like that. 4) Engine rebuild. 5) Customization: wart removal, interior work, and an attempt at making custom made bumper tops. In this build off challenge I face multiple fronts of challenges: 1) I grew up helping my Dad fix VWs, redid a Triumph Spitfire in my early 20s with his help, and have done numerous small projects over the years, but this is my first full rustoration on my own. 2) I have a severely limited budget. I am active duty Army, and everybody knows that NCO paychecks leave much to be desired. 3) I’m often short on time. My current assignment is as an instructor requiring me to work 10-12 hour days and 50-60 hour weeks. 4) I have a bum knee that makes it almost impossible to crouch and am fighting a shoulder issue that makes working overhead painful (praying for no surgery). 5) Nothing but the windshield and fine machine work like the heads and crank will be farmed out, I’m doing this on my own. Well this is where we are starting, and honestly, who knows where we’ll end up. I haven’t really decided on color, engine, or upgrades, though I’m leaning towards keeping the 1.7 Liter Fuel Injection unless a good deal on another engine arises. I’m also thinking of keeping the car black but going minimal chrome, but who knows what the good idea fairy will deliver. I hope you enjoy the journey as much as I do. Attached thumbnail(s) |
JoeDees |
Jul 17 2016, 07:15 PM
Post
#2
|
Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 515 Joined: 10-November 14 From: Northern Kentucky Member No.: 18,106 Region Association: None |
Sunday. Shop soundtrack: Ramones discography.
It was a really straightforward day, the biggest challenge was using scrap pieces of sheetmetal prudently. Step 1 was just cutting some metal and welding it into the holes in the floor. Step 2 was to make the 3 firewall patch pieces. 3 was the weld-thru primer. 4 welds. 5 be lazy grinding. The floor stuff was simple, and the firewall pieces weren't that bad considering I learned the tricks when I did the other side, but this side was harder since I had to work around the e-brake cable holes, and I had the floor in. At some point in the afternoon my soundtrack ran out as did my patience so I gave up on the grinding. It's a really tough area and may require the Dremel to really get the welds ground down, but I also know that I didn't get the pieces perfectly lined up so it will never be perfect. I figure I'll reevaluate next week and decide what to do...because my attitude today is thinking: "it'll all be slathered in seamsealer and hidden behind the backpad anyways..." Attention to detail, just didn't have it today. I also didn't get around to the foam removal, which considering my attitude is probably a good thing. I forgot to mention that Saturday's rust discovery resulted in also having to remove the e-brake cable guide. It's not really rusted but the stuff behind it had a little surface rust killed by the wire wheel. Attached thumbnail(s) |
914forme |
Jul 18 2016, 11:04 AM
Post
#3
|
Times a wastin', get wrenchin'! Group: Members Posts: 3,896 Joined: 24-July 04 From: Dayton, Ohio Member No.: 2,388 Region Association: None |
Sunday. Shop soundtrack: Ramones discography. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/aktion035.gif) Looking good, keep it up, I am shocked your jack post as all wormed up, but the logs behind faired pretty well. How was the Eastwood stuff to shoot into the inner logs, worth doing or just made a huge mess? |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 22nd November 2024 - 08:24 AM |
All rights reserved 914World.com © since 2002 |
914World.com is the fastest growing online 914 community! We have it all, classifieds, events, forums, vendors, parts, autocross, racing, technical articles, events calendar, newsletter, restoration, gallery, archives, history and more for your Porsche 914 ... |