need advice restore or part out, what should i do |
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need advice restore or part out, what should i do |
dm65 |
Apr 22 2013, 08:15 PM
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 9 Joined: 22-April 13 From: ohio Member No.: 15,797 Region Association: None |
I have a 72 that's been in storage for over 30+ years and has rust to the point the doors don't close very well. I would like some opinions on whether I should restore it or part it out.
Wanted to restore for my first granddaughters 16 b-day but she doesn't seem to have interest in it at 11. These cars have never been flashy but I thought she would kinda like it.... Well anyways what would you do if this car was yours? What should I plan for cost? Injectors been missing for 30years so it may need a rebuild plus it has 99000 miles on it Interior is in nice conditions. No tears Also is anyone from Ohio Dave [attachmentid=382 404] Attached thumbnail(s) |
mepstein |
Apr 22 2013, 08:20 PM
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#2
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914-6 GT in waiting Group: Members Posts: 19,518 Joined: 19-September 09 From: Landenberg, PA/Wilmington, DE Member No.: 10,825 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
~$30-$50K to restore.
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dm65 |
Apr 22 2013, 08:35 PM
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#3
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 9 Joined: 22-April 13 From: ohio Member No.: 15,797 Region Association: None |
~$30-$50K to restore. You are kidding Right! I can't see it costing that much with me doing 90% of the work. Not really the kind of guy that would hire it out except for maybe the engine rebuild due to the machining.. Have you done one? Did it really cost that much? Or does this look that far gone |
scotty b |
Apr 22 2013, 08:44 PM
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#4
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rust free you say ? Group: Members Posts: 16,375 Joined: 7-January 05 From: richmond, Va. Member No.: 3,419 Region Association: None |
pay a shop and yeah, it's going to run that for true restoration on a car that bad off. When the doors get tight at the top you have severe rust that requires fixtures to make certain it is all in proper specs. Look around on this site and you will find several people that tried major repairs without jigs and made the cars even worse.
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dm65 |
Apr 22 2013, 09:01 PM
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#5
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 9 Joined: 22-April 13 From: ohio Member No.: 15,797 Region Association: None |
pay a shop and yeah, it's going to run that for true restoration on a car that bad off. When the doors get tight at the top you have severe rust that requires fixtures to make certain it is all in proper specs. Look around on this site and you will find several people that tried major repairs without jigs and made the cars even worse. Thanks I understand it would be an involved process but is it possible for some one to make these jigs to hold the body from flexing an keep it spec during welding. I don't have a rotisserie but I do have a lift and I could fab a cart for it to roll on if that would be better. Are you suggesting parting it out? No way I could afford 30k to restore it. |
Mike Bellis |
Apr 22 2013, 09:06 PM
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#6
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Resident Electrician Group: Members Posts: 8,346 Joined: 22-June 09 From: Midlothian TX Member No.: 10,496 Region Association: None |
pay a shop and yeah, it's going to run that for true restoration on a car that bad off. When the doors get tight at the top you have severe rust that requires fixtures to make certain it is all in proper specs. Look around on this site and you will find several people that tried major repairs without jigs and made the cars even worse. Thanks I understand it would be an involved process but is it possible for some one to make these jigs to hold the body from flexing an keep it spec during welding. I don't have a rotisserie but I do have a lift and I could fab a cart for it to roll on if that would be better. Are you suggesting parting it out? No way I could afford 30k to restore it. Search for "Celette Bench" and you will see what the "jigs" look like. Honestly, you would be better off buying a good roller body and swapping all your parts over. It will save you $20k (EDIT:) or more $$$ |
scotty b |
Apr 22 2013, 09:12 PM
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#7
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rust free you say ? Group: Members Posts: 16,375 Joined: 7-January 05 From: richmond, Va. Member No.: 3,419 Region Association: None |
If you have real experience with metal fab then yes you could do this yourself. That said, you're most likely going to get into areas where you will have to remove engine mount, suspension mounts and other sensitive items that will then need to be replaced back into a precise spot, or worse, replaced with another used part, or made new by you. It all comes down to your skill set, mechanical knowledge and ability to accurately and properly repair these spots as you are now dealing with suspension mounts that if they should fail could result in tragedy.
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mepstein |
Apr 22 2013, 09:29 PM
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#8
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914-6 GT in waiting Group: Members Posts: 19,518 Joined: 19-September 09 From: Landenberg, PA/Wilmington, DE Member No.: 10,825 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
~$30-$50K to restore. You are kidding Right! No I can't see it costing that much with me doing 90% of the work. Just the replacement sheet metal, parts, materials, paint, ect will be well over $10K - not including the engine, trans and suspension. Not really the kind of guy that would hire it out except for maybe the engine rebuild due to the machining.. Have you done one? Paying to have one done right now. Did it really cost that much? Yes Or does this look that far gone. If the doors are touching, then yes, the "backbone" of the car is gone and is the most major repair you can do on a 914. You see a fun, cute, sporty little car with great memories. Your 11 year old grandaughter sees an ugly, smelly, rusty piece of junk on 4 old tires. Good luck with whatever you decide. I love these care as well. |
dm65 |
Apr 22 2013, 09:41 PM
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#9
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 9 Joined: 22-April 13 From: ohio Member No.: 15,797 Region Association: None |
I appreciate all of your opinions and yes it would be nice to find a Donner body that was solid But I am not sure how many of those are out there. Hard decision to make because I have had it for so long and it sucks finding out You stored a useless piece of scrap.... |
scotty b |
Apr 22 2013, 09:45 PM
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#10
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rust free you say ? Group: Members Posts: 16,375 Joined: 7-January 05 From: richmond, Va. Member No.: 3,419 Region Association: None |
(IMG:style_emoticons/default/blink.gif) Do as you wish, but I'd avoid a Donner body if I were you. Won't be much left, and what there is, might be a little dry (IMG:style_emoticons/default/blink.gif)
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JeffBowlsby |
Apr 22 2013, 09:50 PM
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#11
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914 Wiring Harnesses Group: Members Posts: 8,663 Joined: 7-January 03 From: San Ramon CA Member No.: 104 Region Association: None |
Hi Dave, glad you found this place. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wink.gif)
The photos tell alot about the condition of the car, but even more photos of the hell hole below the battery tray, both jack points and other rust areas might help understand exactly what scope of repairs this car needs. All the parts are available and there is a tremendous support network here. Sticking doors are an indication of serious structural rust, that is expensive to repair. Keep looking there is more rust, guaranteed. A 1972 1.7L is not one of the more sought after (read valuable) 914s for various reasons, but the restoration costs are near the same for any 914/4 so the return may not pencil, unless the car has sentimental value or you will keep it awhile. The car looks pretty dirty, maybe if you cleaned it up you would see better what you have to work with. Sounds like the interior is excellent and it looks like the dash is not cracked, good points. What else is in good condition? Have rodents done any damage? That said, even excellent condition 1.7L cars can demand high dollars in terms of value, but its all about condition. For the amount of money it will take to restore this, you may not want her to drive that nice of a car as her first car, and there may be more appropriate cars for your grandaughter. |
GeorgeRud |
Apr 22 2013, 10:08 PM
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#12
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 3,725 Joined: 27-July 05 From: Chicagoland Member No.: 4,482 Region Association: Upper MidWest |
My experience is that teens often end up with the first car being a sacrificial lamb (at least with my two). A Volvo wagon and Mazda Tribute gave their lives to save my kids, and they both survived the teen years and are now good, careful drivers.
I know of a 914-6 that was destroyed by the son of a longtime Porsche friend when he used that as a first car for his son. With so many drivers so distracted and brainless, a more modern car with the latest safety features may be more appropriate for a new driver. |
dm65 |
Apr 22 2013, 10:08 PM
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#13
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 9 Joined: 22-April 13 From: ohio Member No.: 15,797 Region Association: None |
I appreciate all of your opinions and yes it would be nice to find a Donner body that was solid But I am not sure how many of those are out there. Hard decision to make because I have had it for so long and it sucks finding out You stored a useless piece of scrap.... Thanks lots of good info here glad you told me about it. The car is in primer and I had to move from another location last year. Yes it needs cleaned and I need to empty it out and look over the whole car. I'm sure it has cancer in other areas just not sure how much. Just thought it would be nice to see it on the road. Don't really think it will bring much value on the market in this condition nor restored. I had considered getting rid of it but not much demand for them around here for parts or other wise Not sure if its worth parting out either. Go through the trouble then can't sale the parts wouldn't be good. |
ThePaintedMan |
Apr 22 2013, 10:11 PM
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#14
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 3,886 Joined: 6-September 11 From: St. Petersburg, FL Member No.: 13,527 Region Association: South East States |
... but I'd avoid a Donner body if I were you. Won't be much left, and what there is, might be a little dry (IMG:style_emoticons/default/blink.gif) Lol, I got it (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) |
Dasnowman |
Apr 22 2013, 10:26 PM
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#15
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You miss 100% of shots you don't take! Group: Members Posts: 265 Joined: 24-May 12 From: Tricities, B.C./ Lake Whatcom Member No.: 14,477 Region Association: Canada |
I have a 72 that's been in storage for over 30+ years and has rust to the point the doors don't close very well. I would like some opinions on whether I should restore it or part it out. Dave My teener had fairly straight body, very little rust, but once I started digging it got worse. The strait body ended up having up to 3" of filler, every body panel ended having a dent or damage somewhere. The little bit of surface rust here and there turned out to to be deeper then I expected. I think I lucked out as the engine has almost 150lbs of compression strait across but I still have to change all the dried out gaskets and fire it up so who knows. I would use this guide to better get an understanding of what you are dealing with! http://bowlsby.net/914/Classic/zTN_Gen_914CAF.pdf To be honest if the car had some rust and a good engine I would do it or if the body was good and the engine wasn't I would do it. But with both the body, engine and interior in ruff shape I don't think I would do it or it is to expensive to do. Think I have spent as much on tools as I have on the car so far. It's a whole different world from doing bolt of parts on newer cars for the last 20 years then doing a rustoration on a Teener. Every week it seems like I need more sand paper, wire wheels, zip cuts metal and tools to do one thing or another. car supplies Body panels 1000-3000 sandblasting 800-1500 paint and primer 600-1000 misc body stuff 200-300 body gaskets seals rubber 500-900 windshield $200-500 dash pad $100 carpet kits $150-300 seat foam, door cards and material $200-1000 long, chassis ,and suspension reinforcement $300-600 suspension, sway bars etc $1500 and up 5 lug swap $400-1000 wheels and tires 1000-3000 brake system $200-2000 engine 1500-18,000 tranny 200-3000 Consumables cleaners, fluids sand paper drill bits grinding and sanding disks zip cuts rotocut/spot weld cutter drill bit argon/co2 mix Shop Supplies Large Compressor welder 2-3 grinders sawza jigsaw drills two paint guns couple of drills rotisserie 2' jack stands x 4 or lift Car trailer or money for tow truck (sand blasting) air tools Lamps, heaters, fans heavy duty plastic for making paint booth in garage. tranny/engine jack engine stand |
rnellums |
Apr 23 2013, 07:54 AM
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#16
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Professional Enthusiast Group: Members Posts: 1,646 Joined: 26-November 09 From: Littleton, CO Member No.: 11,072 Region Association: Rocky Mountains |
If you do decide to go the parting route, there is quite a bit there of value from what I can see. If the seats are in as good of shape as they look you could expect ~ 100, for both, if they are really nice w/no tears, maybe 100 each to someone local. the dash gauges will get you 75-100, the rear taillights, if uncracked can run 150 for the pair without trouble. If you have a complete lock set with key its ~400, ~25/switch for dash switches in working cond., ~50 for the metal engine grill badges, 50 for the leather covered steering wheel, and the list goes on.
I'm not interested in parts, but have parted 2 914's so far. My last car was totaled and I sold ~2600 in parts from it, and still got to keep the real goodies. Also, plenty of 914 owners in Ohio. |
gothspeed |
Apr 23 2013, 08:20 AM
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#17
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,539 Joined: 3-February 09 From: SoCal Member No.: 10,019 Region Association: None |
I started with a fairly good example and have good engine and fab skills, let me say it is a lot more work than i thought and way more money than i thought. Though the only reason i am sticking with it through completion, is strictly sentimental.
Unless you get your daughter to help you every step of the way, you are far better off just buying her a modern car that will be more reliable and safer at a fraction of the potential expense. |
76-914 |
Apr 23 2013, 08:20 AM
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#18
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Repeat Offender & Resident Subaru Antagonist Group: Members Posts: 13,611 Joined: 23-January 09 From: Temecula, CA Member No.: 9,964 Region Association: Southern California |
there are plenty of good rollers out here. especially the '76's because they need to be smogged out here. if your smog laws don't effect the '76 I would look for one of those in AZ or SoCal.
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Dr Evil |
Apr 23 2013, 09:49 AM
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#19
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Send me your transmission! Group: Members Posts: 23,032 Joined: 21-November 03 From: Loveland, OH 45140 Member No.: 1,372 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
Where are you in Ohio? I live south of Pittsburgh, PA just across the boarder. There tornik550 lives in Columbus area and is a great guy with some knowledge.
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brant |
Apr 23 2013, 10:11 AM
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#20
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914 Wizard Group: Members Posts: 11,739 Joined: 30-December 02 From: Colorado Member No.: 47 Region Association: Rocky Mountains |
buy a 5k running car in good condition, that doesn't need a paint job
then sell off or part out what you have left its the cheapest way by far.... even if your car had ZERO rust you would still end up with more than the 5K into it just to get it running and paint it |
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