Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
DGS 803X Restoration
#1
Hi there. For some reason my last thread of restoration pics got deleted from the forum and a couple of members have asked where the pics have all gone, so here they are again. I will keep adding photos each week as the project progresses.

[Image: 1.jpg]
[Image: 2.jpg]
[Image: 3.jpg]
[Image: 4.jpg]
[Image: 5.jpg]
[Image: 6.jpg]
[Image: 7.jpg]
[Image: 8.jpg]
VIN: 6511
Reply
#2
Cool pictures.
It is quite upsetting however, that your garage is bigger than my house! :lol:
Paul Birks - DOC5 - Worksop
Reply
#3
:lol: My garage isn't very big really. Its only just long enough for the delorean and the chassis behind, and quite narrow too. I think it looks bigger in the pictures. The roofs also too low to put a lift in there Sad
VIN: 6511
Reply
#4
Dan,

fascinating pics - but a question - how do you roll the chassis out without it fouling on
the breeze blocks?

You've made it look very easy...... and Flopsy's chassis needs doing (although I'll take mine to
the place that did Julians in Nottingham, as its a bit closer to Derby then Holland!! lol
Claire Wright  - Club Treasurer
Jul 1981 DeLorean - Flopsy #2292 
Aug 1989 Cavalier 1.6L - Guinney
Apr 2021 Mokka-e Launch Edition - Evie
#170
Reply
#5
Once the body was high enough I put a jack on both sides and lifted the back end off the blocks, slid the blocks out and put a length of wood across then dropped the body down, then did the same at the front. Then once the chassis was out I slid the blocks back in and removed the wood. Then gradually removed blocks to get the shell back down to a safe level.

I understand going to Ed's from Derby is a fair old trek! I got there and back on veg oil luckily so just paid for the channel crossing which was sod all. Ed is going to put it in acid once its stripped to remove all the rust from it. Then its being galvanized, then powdercoated. Ed is also re-tapping all the threads in it and putting copper grease in there so rebuilding should be quite easy Big Grin It should be a pretty mint car when back together Big Grin
VIN: 6511
Reply
#6
Where do you get your veg oil from Dan? And do you get a similar mpg from that as you would from diesel?
VIN 7176
DOC 643
Reply
#7
Veg oil is scrounged from the local tip and the local pub. Mpg was about the same really. I won't be doing it anymore from now on though as my new car is a common rail diesel so can't take it. Anyway gone off topic a bit there :lol:
VIN: 6511
Reply
#8
The frame has now been stripped. Its shocking how rusty it was underneath solid looking epoxy coating.

[Image: 9.jpg]
[Image: 10.jpg]
[Image: 11.jpg]
VIN: 6511
Reply
#9
blimey mate ! mine looks worse than that now ! i think mine will disintigrate when i do eventually get it stripped !!!
doh !!
NTH347X Mike C aka MEC
vin - #4395
DOC 639
Reply
#10
I recommend having it done mate. Also get it stripped before sticking in the galvanizing tank, then you can see whats going on under the epoxy, and make any necessary repairs.
VIN: 6511
Reply
#11
Well, before it get's this bad anyway....... and mine has flew through the MOT like this 3 years running! :wink:

[Image: n720107586_1595037_4989.jpg]
[Image: n720107586_1595039_5601.jpg]
[Image: n720107586_1595041_6225.jpg]
Reply
#12
Blimey whos is that! I have seen one worse than that at Ed's Shock
VIN: 6511
Reply
#13
I'll stick some pics up later of a car that I saw at the DMCH Open House in 2003.

It was from one of the more northern US States that are renowned for the corrosive salt they
put on the roads Sad

Put it this way, a frayed teabag had more integrity then the frame on that particular car.....
Claire Wright  - Club Treasurer
Jul 1981 DeLorean - Flopsy #2292 
Aug 1989 Cavalier 1.6L - Guinney
Apr 2021 Mokka-e Launch Edition - Evie
#170
Reply
#14
If its that bad you dont really have a choice but to strip the frame in an oven and repair then galvanise it, less risky as well.

Otherwise you can dip it with the epoxy on if your convinced the frame isnt that bad, the epoxy is burnt off as soon as its dipped and floats to the surface.

But it does stress the frame and is really risky, but is cheaper... in the three DeLorean chassis that have been done by Medway, they have all turned out ok..but you never know.
Reply
#15
I chose Ed to do it becuase I could leave it with him over xmas and get it back all done and ready to go with the threads tapped out and greased ready to go. Also I wanted it stripped before going in the tank becuase otherwise your galvanising over rust. I don't know what Medway charge and what powdercoating is but I doubt Ed is all that much more and will save a lot of messing about and risk.
VIN: 6511
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)