Chugging along in cleaning up the engine bay and rust repair. Today I cut and welded in the patch for the outside of the battery tray, which came out half-decent I think...yup, more Raider hood...
Seam-sealed and primed
Then I used an old heavy-duty OEM transmisison skidplate (also from the Raider) as a metal source for some heavier stuff to repair the frame rail section I cut out a few days ago.
Welding heavy stuff is much nicer, except having to do it on my back...but it came out pretty good and it's all flap-wheeled and primed now
After that, I pulled the brake master and the booster. I suspected this would be the case (just because it's common on old boosters that have old, leaky masters attached to them. Yup, filled with a bunch of dirty brake fluid......
I had hoped to re-use this booster, but I'll probably find a used on in good shape or a new one - or switch to a 944 booster since I *may* have a spare sitting around and it's a pretty close fit and a bit less boosted (I used one in the rally car to clear the M50 IM).
What I didn't expect, was this rot on the firewall right under the booster. Kind of an odd spot for rust to happen, honestly. On the upside, the place I DID expect rust (at the seam of the front wheelwell with the firewall, which was very rusty on the rally car) is actually perfect. So that's a good tradeoff since this rust should be pretty easy to fix. It's also not really structural, sicne the pedals have a much beefier bracket holding them on, which also holds the booster/master/slave. So I'll cut this out and just patch it, probably no real need to do any reinforcement.
So random question I've always wondered - why do e30 (and other cars I guess) have these holes on the tops of the frame rails? There are drain holes on the bottom, so I guess it's to let water evaporate out, but in my experience what they're really for is so when you drop a nut or bolt or socket, it will ALWAYS fall into the frame hole. While this is all open, maybe I'll tack some metal screen over them or something....