Prorac1
Well-Known Member
Hello B Body Brethren!
This thread is to document me and my sons (Prorac2) progress on our convertible project.
Some of you familiar with FABO will remember our build thread over there.
For those who have no idea who we are and want to waste 2 hours of their life reading about 3 dummies and their antics, the threads here.
Father, Son, and Grand Father project. 1963 Valiant
I find that documenting a project is therapeutic, and can often times remind you of feelings, emotions, and moments in time that you had all but forgotten about.
It also helps keep me motivated. The Mopar family are some of the most helpful, kind, and generous of any I’ve met. And I’m proud to be among you all.
Now, on with the meat and potatoes!
For starters, here’s where the “magic” happens. Lol.
This is the same shop that the restoration thread above occurred in. It’s also where my Valiant was initially restored. It’s also where my father taught me the fundamentals of automotive repair. It’s my home away from home……my dojo.
Here’s what we’re starting with.
It’s already had new rear quarters attached, a “better” front clip/apron/ front frame rails, and trunk drops installed.
The camera is very forgiving to this car. Lol. It’s a lot rougher than it looks.
Thank you so much for reading. Much more to come.
This thread is to document me and my sons (Prorac2) progress on our convertible project.
Some of you familiar with FABO will remember our build thread over there.
For those who have no idea who we are and want to waste 2 hours of their life reading about 3 dummies and their antics, the threads here.
Father, Son, and Grand Father project. 1963 Valiant
I find that documenting a project is therapeutic, and can often times remind you of feelings, emotions, and moments in time that you had all but forgotten about.
It also helps keep me motivated. The Mopar family are some of the most helpful, kind, and generous of any I’ve met. And I’m proud to be among you all.
Now, on with the meat and potatoes!
For starters, here’s where the “magic” happens. Lol.
This is the same shop that the restoration thread above occurred in. It’s also where my Valiant was initially restored. It’s also where my father taught me the fundamentals of automotive repair. It’s my home away from home……my dojo.
Here’s what we’re starting with.
It’s already had new rear quarters attached, a “better” front clip/apron/ front frame rails, and trunk drops installed.
The camera is very forgiving to this car. Lol. It’s a lot rougher than it looks.
Thank you so much for reading. Much more to come.
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