I am about to have my front fenders of my 1970 280SL replaced. Apparently during a previous restoration some "unprofessional" work was done (I am only trying to be polite) , headlamp buckets missing completely and a lot of filler used to mask repairs and prepare the fender for a gleaming paintwork. The car being a US model had European one piece headlamp lenses covering the original US headlamp unit, with hand painted reflectors and missing headlamp bowls.
When I bought a couple of European complete headlamp units they wouldn't fit into the existing cavity and looking deeper and deeper the whole problem became evident.
I have therefore sourced 2 complete front fenders and headlamp buckets plus the whole front end of the car which joins the 2 fenders together and houses the front grille. All these parts came from Poland (Warsaw supplier as mentioned in this Forum) at a "reasonable" cost compared to other suppliers in Europe.
Now however, I am being advised that it would not be correct to remove completely the old fenders, especially the welded seam along the length of the engine bay (where the outer fender is welded to the inner fender) and instead to cut pieces form the new fenders and use them repair the existing fenders. I am told that the lines and gaps of the car will not be perfect as they are now and that it would be very difficult for the repair shop to get everything right.
This seems strange to me having to butcher a new part, if however, that is the way it has to be done I would ask my body repair shop to do this. Is there indeed a serious problem with removing the whole fenders and replacing them with the new ones? Or should I ignore this advice and proceed with full replacement (as I would like to do).
Any views appreciated.