1972 Duster Project - Back From The Pasture
Sorry for the long dry spell. Between working full time and every spare minute spent working on the Duster (instead of my Roadrunner) I give you you the reader's digest version of what has been done in bullet form. As with any resto project, it's like an onion, the more you peel, the more you find unacceptable. This was to be a blow and go driver project but I have a hard time blowing and going.
- Tore seats and out found floor pans rusted out (should have looked closer from the underside)
- Replaced floor pans
- Got to looking at other parts of the interior we thought we could live with, decided we couldn't, tore them out.
- Interior totally gutted
- Painted the top part of the dash B5, decided that the rest of the dash looked like ****
- Gutted the dash and repainted on the car
- Went through the wiring top to bottom, replaced, corrected where needed
- Drivers side fender replaced from donor car (Damn straight, $100)
- Body work on front half of car complete to 220 blocking
- Door hinges rebuilt with oversize pin kit
- Shot the interior (doors, quarter trim etc.)
- Lemon Jr. decided he liked the B5 so much that he wanted the whole car B5 after masking the doors for for a different exterior color. Damn.
- Both quarter glass sections removed and rebuilt / cleaned up
- Dash re-built
- Jambs sprayed
- New windshield
- Engine compartment stripped and painted
- Engine compartment re-built
- On to re-assembly of the interior
- Loving the time with my son. His vocabulary has grown.:lol:
- We can see the light at the end of the tunnel unless we hit another unforeseen obstacle.
- I'm sure I skipped over several steps, pics below.