I recently finished prepping the underside of the hood for paint. Due to all the intricate curves I couldn't use power tools so I had to do this all by hand - that was very exciting. There was a lot of oil on the underside of the hood so first hauled it to the car wash and then gave it a wipe down with lacquer thinner. Then it was sandblast the rusty areas, primarily where the battery was, featheredge those areas and a few spots where the paint was lifting, fine sand all surfaces and then I had it to this point:
The green/yellow areas are where I sprayed it with etching wash primer after the sandblasting to prevent rust until I got to sanding the rest of the hood's underside.
After that I coated the whole underside with etching wash primer which is as thin as water and almost as transparent:
This completes the paint preparation for the colour change on all non-exterior portions of the car, the engine compartment, the door frames, and the edges of the doors.
This weekend I asked my hubby to help me drill the holes for the rear spoiler. We found some tips on the Eagle nest and started by making a cardboard pattern of the centre section:
We transferred the cardboard template to the hatch, centred it and using a sharpie marked the holes for the bolts. As you can see a bit of sand has gotten into the interior:
Ward drilled 5/16" holes in the spots and the fit wasn't quite right so he drilled 3/8" holes to give us a bit of play to adjust the spoiler. On the underside of the hatch we simply drilled holes where the dimples were as the tips we found on the Eagle nest suggested. Here's how it looked on:
It's still slightly too far to the right so Ward's going to bring home some tools from work and we'll enlarge the holes on the left a bit so we can get it just right.
Ward did up a template for the small side pieces:
He transferred the driver's side one to the car and I held the side piece bolts to the marks he made and it was clearly 1/2" too high. We argued about it for a few minutes and then he said "Mark the spots where you think they should be and we'll drill.". I marked the rear one 1/4" below the mark Ward made and the front one 1/2" below the mark he made. Ward drilled the holes, I tried to place the piece in it and Un-oh, its too low to go on.
Ward just looked at me with that "I told you so." grin. He said "How about we do the passenger side my way?". I felt pretty sheepish so he laid the template on the passenger side, marked the holes, drilled, and it fit perfectly. I should have known better than to challenge the master - I won't make that mistake again.
I was thinking that at this point all I needed to do was the finish sanding on the exterior and the car would be ready for paint. As I was thinking that I walked by the rear quarter on the passenger side and thought, "The rear quarter is dented!". I got closer and realized it wasn't dented, ran my hand over it and it was clear the shaping of the body fill I had done there wasn't even close to right and upon looking at the driver's side it wasn't even close to the same as the driver's side. I can't figure out how I missed that, its so obvious and yet at the time I was doing the rough sanding I was sure I had it bang on. So after reshaping that area I
should have nothing left but the fine sanding on the exterior to be ready for paint.