On a side note, the black beading came from Woolies in England. I will also re-post these picks on the beading thread. Not much to be said...it smells like vinyl, and seems to be just like the Moss version, except for the color. I have to cycle this into the paint rotation somehow.
Now, Steve pointed out that he and I have issues with pitting in the metal we didn't replace. Shoot, I even have pitting in metal I DID replace! So, a lot of the time prepping the tub was spent glazing all the areas that are pitted. This should smooth it right out to look like a fresh stamping. Only the bodyman knows what's underneath!
Now we move on to the crisis of the week. I was reading Tom's thread on replacing his boot floor...and OMG!...I realized I had forgotten all the wire loom tabs on the new floors!!
This oversight made it worth the fact I messed up spraying the tub. Because, welding the tabs in will burn the paint I sprayed anyway. In the end all worked out, but my hands are sore cutting 18 tabs!
While I was making and welding the tabs, I took the time to turn up the tabs on the car, just enough to get paint under them. Standard didn't do this, so there is bare metal under every tab from the factory. By lifting them a bit, I can spray under, and then bend the ones that won't be used right back flat against the floors or bulkheads.
This is my wire tab production line. What a tedious job!
More pits...plus the wheel well repair I inherited.
Also notice I am using sealer along all the body panel seams. Last car I used a 3M body sealer. It hardened and cracked. That is NOT what you want in a sealer. It should remain flexible for the life of the car. Most cars in the 50's and 60's used that black, gooey, tar stuff that would stick to anything it touched. I think it was the basis for the McQueen movie "The Blob". I can no longer find that stuff.
This time I am trying a new sealer from Evercoat, the same company that makes the filler I am using. We'll see in a few years if I like it or not.
These are some shots of where the wire loom tabs go on a TR2. You can just make out 2 under the rear valence. There are actually 2 on the other side too.
The boot floor on the sides get 2 more each. I placed these off the original tub. I had to study it for an hour to even see the remains of the tabs, since it was so rusted out.
Moving forward, there are 2 on the sloped panel behind each seat (not shown). Here is shown the rear tab on each side of the floors.
Another tab each side about mid span of the door opening.
2 tabs on the forward floor...and notice there is one where I had to replace the metal on the front floor panel/firewall.
So, in all I had forgotten 18 tabs. How's that for a last minute catch? I really owe Art a beer for bringing the tabs up in Tom's thread. If he hadn't, I'd be cussing up a storm when it came to install the wiring next spring!! He also sent me several pictures that I will try to repost, showing several of the tab locations.
The following pics are close-ups of some areas that need to be addressed before paint. In this one, you can see that the battery box must be sealed, or it will leak on the interior tunnel cover. The judging manual states that the edges of the box may be glazed, but should be obvious. In other words, the edges must show, even though it would look better to cover them right over !
I also sealed the bottom of the brake box on the driver's side. If the master cylinder leaks, I do not want brake fluid all over the carpet.
Standard was not big on sealing body panels. Originally, they only sealed a few, leaving many to trap moisture and then rust. I have sealed any panel joints that I think would leak into the cockpit if not sealed.
Here is one that is easy to miss...where the scuttle drip rail meets the firewall stamping. the TR2 bonnet has no drip lip on the bonnet rear edge, so water will drip down onto the firewall. If these seems are open, water can come right inside and down the carpeted footwell.
These pics are the final walk around after prepping the tub. I forgot to show that I spent almost a day perfecting the seems where the outer sills meet the quarters and the front wing. Those are the little things that really make the car "pop", as they say on the house shows my wife watches.
So, that's it for now!