And survey says; #1 Question is tell us the story behind the car #2 If you have the time & skill just about anything can be done.
all of the metal pieces and parts will come from Lee Kay in orange county, he's the best in my book. He hand builds entire coupe body's.
backstory is that it was dug out of a river in okmulgee oklahoma with a tree growing through the middle of the roof. There ain't a straight piece of metal on this pig. But at the end of the day , it's just metal. A little cut here a little metal shrink there, a little tig weld here, etc... AND A HELL OF A LOT OF BONDO!!
I'd have to go with the somewhat solid rear section and build from there. Not that the back section can't be saved but using that section might give you a good foundation to build from. One thing about it, it makes cutting the two cabs I have in two and making a stretched and chopped cab out of them a piece of cake in comparison. I'm subscribed as my daughter wants a steel 40/41 Willys coupe and I'm afraid she might drag a similar project home one of these days.
It's a project worth saving. I just have to ask, for the record how many different bodies donated parts? Hard to believe there are that many parts bodies out there.
This looks like something we might have taken on. Don't give up it will be well worth it when it's done. If it's a willys it's worth saving. Gasser Girl
When I looked at your pics I threw up a little in the back of my throat because if I tried to fix that it would probably look worse when I was finished. I've seen some amazing metalwork here on the HAMB but sometimes I wonder whether it would be better overall (time/money) to find a better donor car than to spend hundreds or thousands of hours resurrecting a frankenstein. Good luck. I look forward to another amazing HAMB project.
I get the feeling from some of the "saves" I've seen on the HAMB that taking a pile of scrap(no offense drumyn29!)and bringing it back to life delivers a level of satisfaction that would be hard to achieve with a good donor car. To each his own, but its builds like this that I really appreciate most. Not only is it educational but its downright cool!