There is still a shit ton of work to do here but I can only do it in small bites. The little beastie is up on jackstands and it still kills my lower back to work on it for more than a few minutes at a time.
This time I took better pictures so you can see why I am (attempting to) replace the floor board under the seat.



Yeah, it’s rotten.

Cutting that out with an angle grinder and a cut off wheel was quite challenging but I managed to get it done. There is a support strut under there that I had to cut out also that I didn’t get pictures of. I drilled out all the spot welds that it was holding on to the floor board and will now have to weld that back in first, measure and mark it so that I can line it up under the replacement and then drill new holes in the new piece to spot weld it back under the new piece. Like I said, there is still a shit ton of work to do. A little here and a little there as weather and my body allows.
Phil, your a beast, keep at it.
Trust me, I had to force myself to go out and get started again today.
Only because the weather was spectacular and I couldn’t justify sitting on my ass.
That pie pan and that thin seat was the only thing between your ass and the pavement? You ain’t never gonna get me into that for a ride, no way Jose…
Just take it easy and don’t over do it.
Getting old sucks.
I replaced the floor pan on a 67 Mustang 25 years ago when I was 40. That was a miserable job. I could not do that job today. That Mustang was a money pit. Besides the floor pan it got sound deadener and new carpet, rebuilt and recovered seats, new dash, headliner, wiring harness, rebuilt steering linkage, suspension components, disk brake conversion, crate engine, and TKO 5 speed. I sold it breaking even for the money I had dumped in it. It still needed some body work and a paint job.
Nice work man! Know the drill on pain an lack of energy. I’m on day 3 of wiring up stereo head unit . 3 fucking days yup !
I’ve used panels from washer/dryers and plywood for this job. Also on small English cars, I’m so over those.
Ya wouldn’t let me steal the Sprite a few years ago, so I bought a B a couple weeks ago. Miseryl love company, my friend. The guy I bought it from went to the Twist & Tape School o’ Wiring. I’ve pulled 15 lbs of unused, unneeded, badly installed 12 gauge wire out so far, all of it still live and going to nothing. The 2 amp radio curcuit had a 35 amp fuse in it; the rewired 10 amp electric rad fans didn’t have one at all. Just a wire taped to the dash lights, run through a small switch to the fans using 16 guage wire. Hurts my aircraft mechanic head.
What Bear Claw said, and what you said, I would have a difficult time finishing this.