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  • @tonypage1056
    @tonypage105614 сағат бұрын

    That's a rare old beast, looks great!

  • @stephenhorne1671
    @stephenhorne1671Күн бұрын

    Great job, I would like to see the original wheels fitted, these are not doing it justice

  • @ShedTV
    @ShedTVКүн бұрын

    When did you last see one of these? I always liked the old Datsuns, as a teenager I drove around in a tatty old Sunny.

  • @rogerpritchard
    @rogerpritchardКүн бұрын

    These are rare in the UK today. But I still see them and others used daily where I live in northern Thailand, near Laos. Great car, and video.

  • @MartinWall-n7h
    @MartinWall-n7hКүн бұрын

    Your points are all valid, the UK is a very high-cost country as an ever-decreasing number of `Doe'rs` are paying for the `Service` industries that get more and more necessary because of legislation. I ask people what they do for a Living, and depending on their reply I can normally judge if they are going to be able to afford my services. Negotiation is not normally required, I explain the costs, offer an open book contract and as you say try to keep to the estimate. If they can't afford it, then smile and wave boys, smile and wave!

  • @jimmypratt6450
    @jimmypratt6450Күн бұрын

    Lovely job as good as new if not better 👍👍

  • @messylaura
    @messylaura2 күн бұрын

    whats the novol underbody you use? is it a 2k stone chip type of thing like the 3m sprayable sealer? i used that (22 packets) as an entire under body coating (floor and 4 wheel wells) on a 67 Mercedes and its held up exceptionally well

  • @bobfrankish8883
    @bobfrankish88832 күн бұрын

    It's a certain type of enthusiast that is into these old Datsuns, and that isn't me I'm afraid. However, a fantastic job by yourselves, no mistake.

  • @dougwernham5209
    @dougwernham52092 күн бұрын

    Fantastic restoration.

  • @01menyou
    @01menyou2 күн бұрын

    Amazing work, but I'd love to know why the customer would put all that money into that car? Dead sunk cost, lost forever. I suppose we're all different..

  • @neilmacdonald2207
    @neilmacdonald22072 күн бұрын

    I’ll be keeping this car for the rest of my life then one day it will be my daughters, get it done once and get it done right then you don’t have to worry. Hopefully I’ll get 40 years motoring out of this:-)

  • @drewaitchison3521
    @drewaitchison35212 күн бұрын

    For me it would be for a nostalgia trip. I'd want yellow & white plates though.

  • @01menyou
    @01menyou2 күн бұрын

    @neilmacdonald2207 if you're the customer and saying you paid for this, then fair enough. I'm not questioning the quality of the work. But being honest, I think you're barking to have put serious money in such an ordinary old car. Right now, with the world how it is, I'd be thinking of a better place.

  • @kevinford6420
    @kevinford64202 күн бұрын

    Amazing transformation!!! I'm sure the owner will get a lot of pleasure from this restoration. Looks FAB.😁👍

  • @neilmacdonald2207
    @neilmacdonald2207Күн бұрын

    @@01menyou my money is in lots of good places, no one is going without in my family. Sometimes you have to do something for yourself. The enjoyment me and my family have had from this car in the short time I’ve had it you can’t put a price on.

  • @rappers5719
    @rappers57192 күн бұрын

    @5:57 The bonnet seemed a bit high (Just an observation). Adjustment? With the work you have done, it will outlive us all.

  • @theessexhunter1305
    @theessexhunter13052 күн бұрын

    Lot of work as always, the back arch looked a right fiddle! Guess the bonnet is a big panel bit like a Zeffer 6 !

  • @realbogus
    @realbogus3 күн бұрын

    And it fits on a B road?

  • @michaelhart895
    @michaelhart8953 күн бұрын

    I celebrated 40 years this June as a sole trader . I am an Engineer running my small machine shop . I manufacture anything I can that comes through my workshop door ,over the years I have made parts ,assemblies for industrial locomotives, food factories,brick works , ceramic factories, motor industry all by hand . I served a traditional indentured apprenticeship and studied in total 7 years at technical college to achieve HNC in mechanical Engineering. Engineering is incredibly capital intensive requiring very expensive machine tools , tooling and equipment, what I have has taken me 40 years to accumulate and still there is always another piece of tooling ,equipment that you need and of course has to be replaced as things wear . Through experience over the years I have learned to avoid Joe public like the plague if I can , most people simply have no clue what so ever on how much things actually cost , given that you have to charge an hourly rate to cover all of the machinery,tooling equipment that you use , never mind the skill and knowledge. I have had more than my my fair share of people with an obsolete part for their classic car or even worse motorcycle ask you to make something and then expect payment to be a pat on the back and a £10 /£20 note for a days work . Being a sole trader is a thankless task now in this country,personally at present I wouldn’t advise it , over the years any incentive ,any advantages , have been taxed away and legislated away by successive governments no matter which colour rosette they wear . I read yesterday a very small snippet on a news site that for the first time since the industrial revolution, Britain is now out of worlds list of top ten manufacturing nations, we are now positioned twelfth ! Yes that’s right birthplace of the industrial revolution, the nation that dragged the world into the modern Industrial Age , twelfth. Is it any wonder we have a £2.3 trillion debt .

  • @michaelkither2620
    @michaelkither26203 күн бұрын

    Seemed very knowledgeable and professional....well done

  • @user-ro7fh7nu5i
    @user-ro7fh7nu5i4 күн бұрын

    Well done top marks

  • @markallen8256
    @markallen82565 күн бұрын

    Most classic cars after doing a proper job, is only worth a tenth of what you outlay, classic cars have got to be top cars Ferrari, Aston, etc, otherwise it not worth doing

  • @Imnotyourdoormat
    @Imnotyourdoormat5 күн бұрын

    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @garypoulton7311
    @garypoulton73116 күн бұрын

    Nice work, on a horrid car, used one for work yonks ago, awful.

  • @eyman67
    @eyman676 күн бұрын

    Love your work and the way you present it. Bravo lads.

  • @Jeet_Kune_Do_And_Carate
    @Jeet_Kune_Do_And_Carate7 күн бұрын

    The solution to the high pricing is DIY... End of discussion!!! Every person that has a set of hands can talent up and DIY... End of discussion!!!

  • @davidgrainger5994
    @davidgrainger59947 күн бұрын

    When I started restoring classic cars it cost 40 to 50 thousand. The same jobs today can cost half a million.

  • @chrisdebcn
    @chrisdebcn8 күн бұрын

    You are absolutely making sense! I would add a deteriorating GBP (thanks to your government) which certainly doesn’t help on the parts side of things. Buying out of a country with a strong currency parts have actually become cheaper for us believe it or not.

  • @tonypage1056
    @tonypage10568 күн бұрын

    Great job! Good that everything's explained to the customer. I'm sure there are others that would just cover up under the vinyl roof section.

  • @Chitwn81
    @Chitwn818 күн бұрын

    How much would something like this cost? Relatively speaking

  • @paintingclassiccars
    @paintingclassiccars6 күн бұрын

    We are £65per hour plus VAT and materials.

  • @dougwernham5209
    @dougwernham52098 күн бұрын

    Very informative video thank you.

  • @messylaura
    @messylaura8 күн бұрын

    acid is the way to go for removing rust, the key is to keep it wet or better still submerged for 12 - 24 hours. even the cheap stuff like jenolite will completely remove rust like this not so keen on using it as an encapsulator when i did a set of steel wheels that sat in a feild for a number of years i used undiluted hydrochloride acid, well its pretty whiffy but it removes rust while you wait, needs to be diluted and not left in the garage or it turns any bare steel to flash rust!!

  • @lorieandpatrickdavies7483
    @lorieandpatrickdavies74838 күн бұрын

    Enjoyed this video. Im certain the Continental draws a crowd wherever it goes in the UK. Nicely done repairs (although I think the car looked better in its original white).

  • @dalamar6228
    @dalamar62288 күн бұрын

    Another TVR! Please take us through the repainting process of one or both these cars.

  • @paintingclassiccars
    @paintingclassiccars6 күн бұрын

    It will be coming soon :)

  • @jimmypratt6450
    @jimmypratt64508 күн бұрын

    Top class work 👌, theres only so much you can with rust and rotten panels and budgets . I'm just about to finish a T2 camper and the customer just wants it to look clean . None off my repairs will last and he knows it . Some wallets do open wide and some don't 👍

  • @Markycarandbikestuff
    @Markycarandbikestuff9 күн бұрын

    Trouble with these cars when they were new is a lot of the time the roof wasn't painted at the factory, if the painter knew the car was getting a Vinyl roof the roof just got a light coat of primer at best so the roof would rot away merrily under the vinyl, remember seeing a 72 Dodge Charger, car looked mint, when they took the vinyl roof of there was pretty much no steel left. Superb job on the Lincoln though, that half covered style is known as a Landau top, looks well sealed, that should last for years.

  • @bobwilcox1147
    @bobwilcox11479 күн бұрын

    Thanks for carefully explaining the reasons behind your plan of action!

  • @craigjaguar
    @craigjaguar9 күн бұрын

    Hi guys, great work! A couple of questions if I can please - is there any special preparation or paint process/type you would reccomend for under a vinyl roof? And secondly, your panel making ability is awesome, would love to see a video on that in future! Thanks!

  • @paintingclassiccars
    @paintingclassiccars6 күн бұрын

    We would treat a roof to be covered in Vinyl same as we would the rest of the body. Best protection that way. We may do something on panel work - but there is plenty online already - but it will feature in some videos moving forward.

  • @craigjaguar
    @craigjaguar6 күн бұрын

    @@paintingclassiccars thank you!

  • @davidhedges2451
    @davidhedges24519 күн бұрын

    Just goes to show what you uncover when you start these jobs. I know from experience. 😮

  • @lostcabrio
    @lostcabrio9 күн бұрын

    Too much talking in these videos….

  • @JohnDavis-ed5sg
    @JohnDavis-ed5sg9 күн бұрын

    Very good job! Had this been my car I would have left the vinyl roof off altogether, I think it looked good in colour, but I do understand that the padded vinyl is an important part of the car's style.

  • @Markycarandbikestuff
    @Markycarandbikestuff9 күн бұрын

    Same here, thought it looked great at 7:23.

  • @DavidBugea
    @DavidBugea5 күн бұрын

    I agree, it looks great without the vinyl roof. However without the vinyl roof you would then have to source (or fabricate) stainless steel trim to go around the rear window.

  • @chrisgarside7974
    @chrisgarside79749 күн бұрын

    Really interesting job ! Thanks for sharing and taking us through the work needed to ensure many more years of motoring in this US classic.

  • @GUNNERSIGHTZEROED
    @GUNNERSIGHTZEROED9 күн бұрын

    Great to see it restored bacj after a terrible shunt. I hope you are able to pass tour skills on to future people.

  • @mikeyc6563
    @mikeyc65639 күн бұрын

    Quality Work

  • @williamlansbury6727
    @williamlansbury67279 күн бұрын

    The art business is much worse. Everyone wants their painting restored but no one wants to pay. Everything you've said is exactly the same in art resto.

  • @donnengler7532
    @donnengler75329 күн бұрын

    Looks expensive! Better than factory? Absolutely. One would think that new cars are cost-cut to the last penny and therefore cars rust. New and old, unless they live in Arizona or the likes. I'll bet those vehicles you people are painting properly will last quite a while, even in harsh conditions. Very nice, cheers.

  • @fazeelkhan5012
    @fazeelkhan50129 күн бұрын

    Thank you very much for taking the time to respond to the specific questions. It's been remarkably informative listening to your explanations of all the nuances of the preparation and final paint processes. Looking forward to the next video.

  • @davidreid5672
    @davidreid567210 күн бұрын

    Sorry about the damage caused by this accident to this stunning car. What a transformation though looking at the finished result.

  • @DSperation
    @DSperation11 күн бұрын

    Loving the content, especially the longer explanations! I have a question for you if you don't mind. A dilemma I'm facing - would it be more cost effective to buy a new reproduction panel at £800 or a straight, rust free, used one at £200? Would I end up spending £600 in labour prepping the old panel to get it to the stage of the new one?

  • @buzzzzer100
    @buzzzzer10011 күн бұрын

    Interesting to add a polyester filler coat on to the epoxy as historically polyester does not like to bond to epoxy. Looks fantatic finish anyhow.

  • @davyboy888
    @davyboy88811 күн бұрын

    Thanks again for responding to the questions [and in particular my question] in the form of a mid-week video. This is an excellent idea, one that very few youTubers do, and I hope it helps you get the increase in viewers and subscribers you deserve.

  • @dougwernham5209
    @dougwernham520911 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the video.

  • @dalamar6228
    @dalamar622811 күн бұрын

    Is this the same process for a fibreglass car such as a TVR?

  • @bleizbreizh6264
    @bleizbreizh626411 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the update! So what would the minimum temp for curing the paint properly be ?

  • @mmemuohio
    @mmemuohio12 күн бұрын

    Brilliant job. Would you happen to know what the reading might be if one was to do a paint thickness measurement on the finished surface?