So, one last picture from the engine bay for now:
In the front passenger side of the engine bay, normally covered by a plastic cover, is both the ignition coil and the pass-through for most of the wiring for the engine bay. This is one area that is likely to change substantially as I both replace the engine and likely rewire the car. The connectors here are pushing 40 years old, and weren't always the most reliable in the first place. What exactly I do will at least in part be determined by what wiring I will need for the new engine and accessories.
And now, on to one of the things that I was dreading getting into... the roof box. In a seeming act of solidarity among my cars (because the E46 convertible has similar issues...), the DMC has pretty much always had issues with water getting into the cabin in heavy rains- it would somehow get in and soak the headliner and drip down and accumulate in the cover for the map light. I initially thought that the headliners getting soaked was because I hadn't trimmed the new headliner fabric I'd installed when I restored the car initially back enough and it was soaking up water from the roof, but the problem persisted even after trimming it back- so it more and more became likely that there was a leak somewhere in the roof of the car, the majority of which is a metal 'roof box' to which the doors and the hardware associated with them attaches to. To do anything with the roof box, the 'T-Panel' on the roof of the car had to come off, so that was the first thing I did here. Here's the panel itself off to the side with the louvers and engine cover...
And here's the car with the T-panel off...
That's.... not a promising sign. It's supposed to be dry under there, and quite clearly isn't. Granted it's not the worst picture I've seen of a roof box- I've seen them where there's just tons of rust already- but it's still not good. Another shot, this one a bit lower on the back so the fact that it looks like the center of the box has lifted up from the body:
Here's the top of the center section, with the access cover for the door harness connections removed:
It's difficult to tell just how much I'm going to need to do on the roof box... the good news I think is that overall it doesn't look like any of the parts are badly rusted and failing- but I also can't see inside the center section to see what's going on there, and with the doors on it it's difficult to see how bad the sides of the center section are. Since I've not dealt with this before, I've asked for thoughts on the DMC boards. My hope is that I just need to pull the center section off, clean things up and figure out where water is getting into the cabin from, potentially install a repair kit to correct the bowing in the center of the rear piece (a common occurrence given that torque from the doors' torsion bars want to twist it away from the center). If the center section is in too bad of a shape, I'm hoping it's possible to get just the center section from someplace and not have to spend the $1500 that the full roof box replacement costs.
Removing the doors to get a better look at things (and significantly reduce the weight of the body to make it easier to pull off and move around to work on the frame) will make things clearer. It's a bit complicated though given the torsion bars- I should have the tools I need (reaaaaally long 1/2" extension and longer breaker bar) from Amazon tomorrow, and either today or tomorrow will hit the hardware store to pick up the materials to build the 'jig' you use with the extension to adjust/remove the torsion bars (shown below).
Next up: starting to pull the interior and a first look at why I want to rewire the whole blessed thing...