The front inner wings and bulkhead were all very bad as well and needed a lot of repairs, but I think you get the picture - lots of cutting out, making bits and welding them in. Over 300 man hours in total.
And then it's over to the body prep area! Here we've just started seam sealing and smoothing work on the underside:
It's amazing how little exterior surface there is on the actual bodyshell of a Cavalier so the exterior filler work was pretty quick and easy. Here the shell is masked ready for Reface - a sprayable filler which just gives us a uniform surface to block sand, avoiding the usual issues where transitions between filler and metal leave high and low spots.
Top work, Callum. I can't wait to see the finished article (in every sense of the word!). It's great to see a Mk3 Cavalier being given such a thorough restoration.
Robsey: this GSi has extra-special sentimental value for its owner, Jamie. It was his late brother's pride and joy, and Jamie wants to pay tribute to his sibling's memory by giving the car the restoration (restomod) that the pair always talked about. In that context, 'cost vs value' isn't a concern for him. Besides, he intends to keep the car forever and a day, so spending 'new car money' transforming his GSi into a 'new' car isn't all that crazy.
The primer is again dry sanded. No water is used on any porous materials so there is absolutely no risk of moisture retention in the primer. With the primer sanded, the shell is masked again to get a sealer coat. This is just a basic 2k gloss (in a fetching shade of Terracotta in this case!) to seal the seal the shell and create a waterproof layer that we can then wet sand.
The bonnet is a NOS GM one that needed no filler or build, so simply gets etch primed and straight over with the sealer coat.
with the outside sealed, we remask to paint the inside. Inside gets sprayed with a Polyurethane coating which is much tougher than normal acrylic paints.
another re-mask and the shell goes back into the booth, this time on a rotisserie to do the underside. This gets the same Polyurethane treatment, but slightly thicker. We then clear coat over it to give a smooth and easy to clean but super-tough finish.
Epic resto! Scary that a clean looking GSi looks like that under the paint and under seal. You've got to wonder what state the scruffy ones look like underneath. A lot of the internal corrosion is down to water entering the cabin I bet any money. Is it a customer car, or personal project? I'm still hoping that my old white GSi J422 EGT will be restored by the Welshman who I sold it to three years ago.
We then wet sand the sealer coat and re-mask for the final paint. any exterior seams are sealed now so there is minimal paint build up on top of the sealer, minimising the risk of cracking.
wafers wrote:Epic resto! Scary that a clean looking GSi looks like that under the paint and under seal. You've got to wonder what state the scruffy ones look like underneath. A lot of the internal corrosion is down to water entering the cabin I bet any money. Is it a customer car, or personal project? I'm still hoping that my old white GSi J422 EGT will be restored by the Welshman who I sold it to three years ago.
Thanks! It's a customer's car, I just like sharing our work as we're very proud of what we do. Yeah, to be honest many of the Cavaliers (and older cars in general) are probably not in dissimilar condition - certainly we have restored many cars that were on the road and MOT'd which were similar to this when stripped down properly
While all that bodywork was going on we started the engine build.
Step one was to strip the block to a bare casting, have it acid dipped then bored to suit new Omega low-compression pistons and skimmed. Once back from machining it was masked and painted.
The oil and water pumps are just scrap ones we use for masking.
Work is currently on hold due to Jamie's employers being unable to confirm whether or not he has a job to go to in the new year (he works on offshore oil rigs in faraway places like Nigeria). As soon as he gets the news that he is hoping for, Retropower will be continuing with the build.