Below is a photo essay of the progress on a 1969 VW bug that had been Baja'd
years ago that was 're-taken' on by Camerion Gholson. When he started on it, it was a $500 'driver' (sort-of), but had
all the typical rust.
It's of course a 1600cc, dual-port w/ IRS transaxle.
We ordered new, full, pans and changed from the original '69 body to a '68
body that had much less rust. We will add more photos as it progresses.
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Photo collage of the car
prior to beginning work.
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Original rusty pans. One side
had been fiber-glassed to keep the water out. |
Cutting out the old pans. Camerion
cut the large parts out first with a Sawzall,
then used an air chisel to remove the spot welds holding the rest of the pan
edges from the hump.
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He drilled out the front horns and hump area to clean, to inject rust
inhibitor, then to inject silicon to fill them up.
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After filling with silicone, the parts were sprayed with zinc primer.
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Ready for final grinding and
surface prep for welding new pans into place.
He used a wire brush to remove
the primer from the area to be welded, but no more than necessary for a
clean weld.
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New VW floor pans from Brazil ordered through "Midwest VW
Parts". He put a thin bead of silicone on the pan. It
needed to be thin so it would not seep into our weld area.
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Just after the new pans were stitch welded in place (using a Lincoln SP125
Plus wire welder) |
New pans installed.
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The bottom was silicon sealed completely, then undercoated using Brush-on
undercoating / bed lining. This worked very well.
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Due to an inability to get the welder nozzle between the hump and the seat
rails, he used rivets to secure the area. These rivets were later coated
with bed liner as well.
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New VW bug floor pans undercoated.
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New body seal installed on the floor
pans. Use
washers under the rivets to avoid the rivet heads pulling though.
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New pans installed. Too bad
the rest of the car doesn't look as good yet.
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advertisement
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Starting on the body. |
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Camerion Gholson working into the night on the bug.
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Color options we're thinking of going with.
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Jumping forward quite a few steps,
this is about where it's ended so far.... |
Here's a photo collage of an old
body, where the top was removed and the heater channels severed. Below is a
reference of the cross sections for those of you that are chopping a bug top
or turning one into a rat rod, or whatever.
Click on the above collage to enlarge photos.
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