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Car restoration project?


stuarty

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I'm thinking about embarking on my first ever car restoration project. As yet i've not decided what to buy. I was thinking about an older car like a vauxhall nova (my first car) or something similar.

I would like to buy something and refurb it back to its former glory.

I dont want to buy anything too expensive for my first attempt. Also, parts must be available and not too expensive.

Anyone ever done a restoration on an older car?

Any ideas or advice?

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I used to have a sit up and beg Ford Pop, I bought it to hotrod or restore, but after closer examination it needed so much work doing to it I ended up selling it to a specialist who broke it for parts.

 

I also ended up doing similar with a Mini Cooper I also bought to restore, although I ended up breaking that up myself and selling the bits on. Actually made more from the bits than the car would have been worth had I finished restoring it.

 

Its a shame really, but 9/10 its cheaper to just buy a car which is already in good condition rather than buy one to restore as the costs soon spiral out of control and you seldom will end up getting back anywhere near what you have spent on the restoration.

 

Back when I was a lad, you could buy an old mini for 50quid and rebuild it from bits down the local scrap yard for hardly anything. Now adays, any old mini, even non runners are fetching 500quid upwards and you`ll never find any bits in scrapyards - you have to buy them from specialists who charge the earth. Same with Spitfires and mg`s... when I was at college loads of my mates had them, all kept on the road thanks to the local scrapyards.

 

You can get a lot of pleasure (and pain) tho from running an old classic. Sometimes they are easier to work on, but other times, being able to plug a laptop into my car and the car telling me what the problem is, is much better!

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my recent prchase is just like what your doing, ok its not a classic yet but hopefully a fuure classic.

 

i went with a Jag XKR 2000 plate; its in good condition but it needs work to restore it to its full glory. i liked it as a project car as i can still use it daily while i work on it. and a big advantage is there are loads of parts new and 2nd hand for them. ebay is full of stuff and there are lots of other places as well; so parts aren;t mental. and as its OBD compliant i can still contect up to the car and read the problems.

 

my list of to do jobs so far:

 

Restore leather on drivers seat bolster

replace all painted window trims

remove and reseal drivers headlight

repair a minor scratch to the wood on the steering wheel

seal and wax oil the underside of the car

wheel arches will need some work not major, but it will give me a chance to practice my spray painting more.

front grille needs straigtening or replacing

alloys need a refurb (still in a good stat but not 100% perfect)

paint work needs a full clean and machine polish

i'm currently cleaning the injectors

might even do my own part service and do the sparks and oil

going to do an engine flush

 

improvements a future projects

 

renew exhaust and also hand build one section to my own specification

update all the bulbs

re paint and clean the engine bay, things like painted rocker covers, make the supercharger shiney and polish the lettering etc

replace all the engine bay bolts

modify the satnav screen to run a carputer

possibly lower the suspension

upgrade SC pulleys for more power

temporary change of air filter while i own it. (restore to original if and when i sell)

maybe a light tint to the rear window and rear quarters

 

fix what ever else goes wrong etc :lol:

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What about a mk1 golf gti the parts are cheap and easy to get as all the VAG car bits were inter changable and very easy to work on and adapt if you wish. More importantly they have a strong following in case you need to bail out of it!

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i am sorry but if you buy a nova and restore it to its former "glory" i might just have to restore to the shed it deserves to be.

 

its the chavs who drive shitboxes like that who have caused insurance to be so bad for young lads over the years! :rant:

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What about a mk1 golf gti the parts are cheap and easy to get as all the VAG car bits were inter changable and very easy to work on and adapt if you wish. More importantly they have a strong following in case you need to bail out of it!

 

That would be a good project. If you can get one for the right cash as the mk1 gti`s always have a good following.

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My mate has a spitfire that he's rebuilt. He recently bought a 'matching numbers' all original Nova Sport which is stripped in his garage.

 

My advice would be buy a rolling restoration and not a bag of bolts with a rusty shell. That way it'll have a fighting chance to be completed and survive.

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I think it might also be worth asking

 

What budget to buy?

What budget to restore?

What experience do you have?

What space you have? Driveway or garage etc.....

Time scale?

What you like?

What you want?

 

 

That might help.

 

No point in suggesting a BL car (vitually all parts available from Rimmer Bros) if you want a french hatch from 1988

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What about a mk1 golf gti the parts are cheap and easy to get as all the VAG car bits were inter changable and very easy to work on and adapt if you wish. More importantly they have a strong following in case you need to bail out of it!

 

That would be a good project. If you can get one for the right cash as the mk1 gti`s always have a good following.

 

A friend of mine restores old mk1 gti's! He currently drives a mint rabbit! B) They go for serious money now. Rapidly becoming a real classic! You'll be lucky to get anything decent for less than a grand!

mk2's are where the gti guys look now! :#1:

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What? Nobodies mentioned an old Z yet??

 

they aren't cheap, even when they fooked

 

280ZXs are fairly cheap:

 

http://www.classiccarsforsale.co.uk/cla ... arno/93439 :

 

datsun-280zxturbo-93439a.jpg

 

http://www.classiccarsforsale.co.uk/cla ... rno/130123 :

 

datsun-280zx-130123a.jpg

 

 

 

I think the 280 would have to be a labour of love. The price difference between a good one and a not very good one is so small that you'd be out of pocket very quickly..... 260s offer better value in my eyes. The gap is much bigger between fixer upper and good example. Obviously the outlay is higher though.

 

 

 

I would get something that will be worth equal or more money than you have in it after completion unless it's a labour of love and you plan to keep it.

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