So, I held off on posting all of the really bad stuff, I figured most people would be like, "yeah this isn't gonna go anywhere." So to save myself from any attempts at deterring me from my project, I never posted the worst stuff.
So I saved them for the day the engine was confirmed running and happy. In fact, upon calling a place that was well known for these cars, they told me there was no point in rebuilding this car and basically that I was crazy, and not worth my time, and was essentially given a lot of flak over the phone. Upon giving me a quote on what they begin rebuilding engines at, I went "yeah lol. no." Asinine price. I guess he assumed I was ignorant and had no idea and would just write a check and he could laugh to the bank.
The interior itself is great, the chassis and frame is great, but the wiring and engine were shot.
I talked to my machinist, and built it exactly how I wanted it.
The engine, when I got it, was filled to the top of the dipstick. I don't mean that it was filled to the full mark, I mean the entire dipstick had fluid. Water, fuel, oil, coolant. You name it. The carbs had sat for so long that they were completely and utterly destroyed. Holes in the float bowls, literally crumbling as I took them out. One of the float bowls broke off as I took the carb off the engine. Some of the pistons were so corroded away, they looked like they had melted.
On top of this, the factory head gasket had failed a long time ago, and the heads were so severely pitted, it was 15 hours of welding PER HEAD to repair them properly.
I still knew it could be rebuilt. Pretty sure i'd be 2-3x the original quote for where I'm at if I went to the guy who told me where his prices "started", and we used aftermarket parts (far cheaper than factory), and came out with a result that is (in my opinion) better than factory.
Even the guy who repaired my cylinder heads laughed when I told him the original "starting cost" of rebuilding everything quoted by that shop. His words, "Metal is metal, welding is welding, machining is machining. This metal and that engine is still just metal at the end of the day. That's ludicrous." My machinist told me that was also ridiculous, and has wanted to work on these cars for a long time, and thus began the journey. He now has every tool imaginable to work on the v8 engines.
The day I pulled the engine and got the heads off was unsettling, stressful and I knew there was a long road ahead.
These are the carbs. I held onto them for the sake of reminding myself just how much of a pain this was going to be.

one of the cylinders

One of the cylinder heads and pitting. As you can see, the combustion chamber is completely rotted away.

That doesn't look TOO bad, right?

Well, that was after I had cleaned it up.

The frame of the car itself was fine but the subframe was not, needed to be fixed.

Remember that piston that looked rather melted?


But with time, progress, patience, money, it's alive. After being told that "what i had is basically a parts car" and that, "this isn't just some corvette you can get parts for at the junk yard, these things are hens teeth" and having been insinuated that I'm some sort of idiot with a pipe dream, I took the time to make sure that dreams could come true. I wanted a challenge, I got a challenge, and a wonderful challenge it has been.




