Next, I needed to cut the roof panel loose from the side frames, and begin building a structure to hold my mold while I fit it to the car, and made the plugs for the sides.
More Mustang hacking YEAH! :
Did you know you can actually cut the front windsheild with a sawzall, but the rear window will shatter from the friction heat? 3 months later, I've still got little pieces of glass everywhere!
Setting the side frames was important. They would determine the shape of the car, and hold every detail. I played with the angles a lot until they met my satisfaction:
I installed a piece of unistrut down the center line of the car. This was my reference line so that I could measure to insure both sides remained symmetrical:
I made my junkyard trip on clearance day. They were trying to reduce inventory, and were giving stuff away. I grabbed all the $5 wings I could find, but the Mustang one was not bad at all:
Once I was happy with the basic shape and dimensions, I built a framework to support the sides:
Crude, but effective. The final position of the side frames ended up leaning in much more than on the Mustang. It's not a muscle car- it deserves some more swoopy lines (That's the technical term).