Author Topic: new paint and dashwork project (finis!)  (Read 40110 times)

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #25 on: February 04, 2014, 20:24:17 »
More Pagoda Porn!

1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #26 on: February 12, 2014, 15:58:43 »
Here are some new pics.  In 1971, The front left fender was replaced, and whomever did it, did a crappy job.  They riveted a patch behind the headlight door and bondo'd over it with no undercoating, so the water wicked back underneath and caused the bondo and paint to crack off after 40+ years.  Here's a before and after being fixed the right way.  Also a fun welding pic of me welding the rivet holes in the door for the chrome trim (not the lower clip holes) and the upper rubber chrome aftermarket trim someone put on years ago.  (just kidding, not me)

Mike Mizesko
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #27 on: February 14, 2014, 19:23:15 »
Joe Alexander and I took the fuel lines and plated parts off the engine today.  Making progress.

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #28 on: February 14, 2014, 19:26:39 »
Found some rot behind drivers side wheelwells and rear tail.  Brian Hoover does a great job of cutting and replacing metal and making it look great.

Mike
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #29 on: February 14, 2014, 19:30:26 »
Found a creepy friend (desiccated mouse skeleton)  up in the driver front fender.  Must have been up there for at least 5 years as a passenger.  Bates motel..... :o

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #30 on: February 24, 2014, 22:07:23 »
Getting closer.  Should be done by April. 

Sent off the fuel lines for cad plating, ordering stainless screws and a bunch of other parts. Not doing dash leather this year.  Something to work on next year.

some rot in the lower tail panel.  Using a patch panel from K&K in Michigan, rather than having Brian have to re-fabricate all those curves.

Primed the rear right quarter, doors  and trunk lid are primed and wet sanded, Front Drivers fender is almost done as well. 

Didn't do a full tear down on the hardtop, but came out great.

Autobody Specialists here in Columbus is a great shop to work with.  Their people are happy and eager to work on the car, and it shows in the quality.

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

Flyair

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #31 on: February 24, 2014, 22:28:34 »
Mike,
Are you keeping the original paint 291H Dark Olive? At one point the pictures were not giving any indication :) I find Pagodas in that color very attractive.
Stan
1971 280SL
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2011 GL
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mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #32 on: February 25, 2014, 01:50:12 »
I've decided to keep the silver and pink and blue, with a little primer and 3 clearcoats... ;D

Yup, Keeping the 291H Dark Olive.  It is the reason i bought the car in the first place.

I coveted this car as a teenager growing up in NY on Long Island.  A red one on the North Shore kept my attention as I would try to find it after seeing it a couple of times.  I also fell in love with a Jaguar XKE in British Racing Green I'd seen at a dealership there.

After my Dodge Challenger, an education and a few years of a career, I test drove an 1969 XKE, (it was white), and I couldn't get this old shotput and discus thrower body to fit.  My head popped over the windscreen, and I couldn't get out of the thing.  The car rattled and didn't run well at all.

But I still loved the BRG color.  So when I finally got to the point when the kids went off to college, I stumbled across a Dark Olive one in my own backyard (here in Columbus), that had spent 30 years in Washington DC and South Carolina.  I'm still picking pine needles out of the air vents.

It was robust, with little rust (that I could see) and a good drivetrain.  It had been hit in the first year of its life in the front right fender, so I knew it had some work done.  I did find a Hypodermic needle under the passenger seat, which may have played a role in the accident.....   The son of the prior owner had brought it up to Columbus after his mother's passing, and started to restore it.  He sent the heads off to California to be reworked, replaced the tie rods, subframe components, fuel injectors, lines, and pump, and took care of the smoking engine.  It did leak a lot of oil though.  Because of the leak, the engine bay was coated with blown oil, which was a bear to clean off.  To make matters worse, the engin had been sprayed with a lacquer, which made a mess over the years.  After a bunch of thinner, we cleaned up the engine a bunch.

Joe Alexander and I changed every seal in the engine, and all the mounts, etc, and he got it running superbly.  Then, I replaced the cracked seat leather, pads, and the canvas top, bought new whitewalls, and drove it 9,000 miles last summer.  Took it to the PGA championship at Oak Hill, and up to Michigan.  I also bought a hardtop (w/ rear defroster) and a becker stereo europa to replace the mono europa, and even found a Kaco trouble light in Germany to buy. pulled the dash apart and had the tach and speedo serviced, sent the radio off to becker to be serviced (my am would cut out), and finally put in LED's in the dash to brighten it.

Next was the exterior paint.  Which is where I am today. 

After this comes the dash and side leather, and new carpeting.

No hurry though, as I don't want to finish too soon, as I need to have something to do with it, lest my eye stray to another vixen, like a 1958 Imperial with Fins and a Hemi.

Sorry I rambled, but a good Cabernet will do that sometimes.

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH

1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #33 on: April 21, 2014, 17:23:43 »
The body shop has been busy with this winter's road casualties here in Ohio, but we're getting closer to completion.  Soft top frame TIG welding is finished, and the lower tail panel was replaced (including fresh spot welds), and the front notches are back.  That's it for the major body work, except getting some dents out of the aluminum soft top hatch.  A week or two out from final paint.  In the next week, we'll reassemble the soft top frame section, and put the newly cadmium plated fuel lines and linkages back in the engine bay.

The weather is getting nice........

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

KevinC

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #34 on: April 21, 2014, 19:25:17 »
Wow. Big job. Nice work!

Alex D

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #35 on: April 21, 2014, 20:42:14 »
Hi Mike,

Just curious, how did they put the notches back?  Did they remove the old body filler?  If not, what did use for references and dimensions? 

Alex
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1967 250 SL
Original 140K mi
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mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #36 on: April 21, 2014, 21:02:32 »
Alex,

The notches were sanded out in 1971. All the prior body filler  and primer was removed from the whole car. They simply added some material like they would have back then, (not lead).  We used pics from Motoring investments, and I took measurements from other cars (3/4" in length).

Mike
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #37 on: May 07, 2014, 15:15:46 »
OK. She's primed and ready for a week of wet sanding. Close to painting.

The we put the fuel lines and linkages back on (yellow cad), windshield, chrome trim, and put the dash back together.

30 days?  It's 81 degrees today and I'm ready to drive her.

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #38 on: May 15, 2014, 01:37:14 »
I am so Psyched.  A week away from rolling her out in the sun.  Here is the hood and trunk lid. ready to rock.

Mike
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

pj

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #39 on: May 16, 2014, 19:11:59 »
Hi Mike,
Once you're rolling, feel like making a trip and getting together? I would really love to take a close look at the end result and chat with you about the issues, because my SL needs similar attention soon. We could meet at Dan's, if you can cross the border, or I could cross the border if there's a convenient way to avoid Detroit. There's a ferry right near Dan's shop that's much nicer than the big bridges. Maybe Michael S or Ken O could join us and make a dinner out of it.

Peter J
1965 230SL #09474 named Dagny
2018 B250 4matic named Rigel

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #40 on: May 16, 2014, 19:17:51 »
Peter,

I've got a son in East Lansing, so a Detroit stop might work. May have to wait till sept though.  Taking it east into PA this summer for a Golf weekend with some old buddies (buddies I've known for a while, and yes, we are old!).

Thanks for reaching out.

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mdsalemi

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #41 on: May 20, 2014, 16:06:15 »
Taking it east into PA this summer for a Golf weekend...

Where will you put the clubs??? ???
Michael Salemi
Davidson, North Carolina (Charlotte Area) USA
1969 280SL (USA-Spec)
Signal Red 568G w/Black Leather (Restored)
2023 Ford Maverick Lariat Hybrid "Area 51"
2023 Ford Escape Hybrid
2024 Ford Mustang Mach Ex PEV

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #42 on: May 20, 2014, 16:14:35 »
Mike,

Clubs fit fine in the trunk. (I don't have one of those five foot putters that are about to be illegal).


Here are pics from this morning.    So close...

Just paint the rockers, black grille between chrome and radiator, and air intake cowling.

Then comes a couple of weeks of putting it back together.

Mike
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mdsalemi

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #43 on: May 20, 2014, 16:48:18 »
Here are pics from this morning.    So close...

When my car was restored, it was about 6 months from when it was in the same condition as yours, until I drove it home. I hope whoever is putting yours together works faster! Sometimes these projects are maddeningly slow, especially when they appear so close...
Michael Salemi
Davidson, North Carolina (Charlotte Area) USA
1969 280SL (USA-Spec)
Signal Red 568G w/Black Leather (Restored)
2023 Ford Maverick Lariat Hybrid "Area 51"
2023 Ford Escape Hybrid
2024 Ford Mustang Mach Ex PEV

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #44 on: May 20, 2014, 16:55:59 »
I've got Joe Alexander 5 miles away.......  I think he wants to see it finished as much as I do.

But, I know it will take longer than I think....

Mike
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

rutger kohler

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #45 on: May 21, 2014, 07:09:20 »
Hi, no doubt removing the engine is the way to go if you have plenty of time and money, however I have cleaned up and resprayed quite a bit of my enginebay with the engine in-situ, with pretty good results.  I couldn't really get to a lot of the engine block itself however. Also I wanted to get the enginebay back up to where the rest of the car was, not concours.

I removed the entire brake mastercylinder/booster, the air cleaner, the air intake manfold but not the exhaust manifold. Removed the radiator, water pump, coolant reservoir etc and the front grille.  The battery and all the support for it plus all the fuel lines to the injectors plus the alternator.  The bulkhead was in quite good condtion from a previous repaint. I used a spray can with etch primer after cleaning, degreasing, and sanding back, and then had some of the original paint the previous owner had kept put into a spray can and gradually worked my way round the engine bay.

The brake booster, air cleaner body and coolant reservoir were also done with matt black. The manifold etc were beadblasted and treated and the appropriate parts cleaned and gold passivated.
1969 280 SL Manual gear shift
1972 280SE 3.5 auto

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #46 on: May 21, 2014, 10:04:08 »
Rutger,

Absolutely Beautiful Bay!  I didn't go that far, but am thrilled with where the car is, vs. where it was when I started a little over a year ago.

When Joe and I are finished with it, I'll post some more pics.  I'm saving leather dash, door panels, carpeting, and engine bay for over the next few years to tackle.  For now, I'm just going to drive her and enjoy!

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #47 on: May 30, 2014, 14:42:28 »
Put cad plated fuel lines and linkages back in wednesday.  just waiting for the windshield and final rub out on the car.  then put chrome back in.

Mike Mizesko
Columbus, OH
1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

mmizesko

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #48 on: June 06, 2014, 14:02:06 »
I think we'll be driving it home next week...

Paint looks like glass...  Especially in the sunlight.

Mike

1970 280SL 291H Dark Olive

Flyair

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Re: new paint and dashwork project
« Reply #49 on: June 06, 2014, 14:53:04 »
very nice... I like the 291H Dark Olive very much and think personally that it's one of the most Pagoda-suitable paints.
Have actually one item I bought in that color and noticed how different it can render depending on light conditions.
Stan
1971 280SL
2011 SL550 AMG
2011 GL
2015 GLA