Thanks Mernsy. That covers every thing I wanted to know. Don't know how I missed it when I searched the forum.
Anxious to see your progress GOPAC. Best of luck with it.
Went over to my cousin's to check out his '83 SX4. The car is in great shape. It is no show car, but I could find no rust on the body anywhere. There are a few small dings. The doors could use some hing pins. Pretty standard stuff for a car from the '80s. It has been sitting for about two years but it was a driver when he parked it (outside). As is such the interior has the lovely mouse mess odor, so a good cleaning would be in order. Might even consider junking the carpet and going with a truck bed liner in its place. Thinking that would do away with the smell and be durable. The car was originally white but the original owner had it painted close to that factory tan/brownish color. I apologize as I know that color has a proper name. As a result the paint is pretty nice, but the firewall and inner fenders are white. The hood hinges, while not rusty, are stiff and as a result the hood has a little curve to it on the passenger side. Are new hinges available? My experience is that they wear and try to push sideways causing this issue. Some oil might help. Hope the hood can be made straight again as it is the power bulge (is that the correct name?) style which I prefer. Along the way my cousin swapped in a factory gauge package from a junkyard. Originally it was a manual but he switched it to an auto as years back he had a donor car. He has everything to put it back to manual, which is what I would want to do in time. Sooner then later I guess as he said the auto was starting to feel sluggish when he parked her, but still drove nicely, so it isn't shot. Tires are good. It has the aluminum 4.2 valve cover. Factory A/C didn't work when parked but it is all there, so I can repair that myself. The engine ran strong, so with a battery, fresh fuel, bleeding the brakes, and cleaning the interior it might be ready to roll if there are no surprises. He also has a NIB Motorcraft carb, which I understand is the preferred upgrade, and a TSM. I understand there is an adapter I'd have to purchase for the Motorcraft to fit. More research.
The bad: the passenger side of the frame (behind the front wheels - I know it is a unibody) looks ok, but the drivers side has a hole big enough for me to put all my fingers in. I'm going to search the forum as I'm sure somebody has tackled how best to repair this common problem. Hoping it can be patched and still be safe and highway/road ready. Lastly, it was getting late and I didn't feel like climbing in the dirt, so I didn't get under it and check the floor pans. Here's hoping they are as sound as the rest of the body. My cousin will check it out this weekend and let me know.
We didn't come to an exact figure, but we tossed around $500 plus maybe another $75~$100 for the Motorcraft carb and TSM. In addition, my cousin is more then happy to help me get her up and running again. The great unknown at this point is the frame and if it can be patched and made safe. I have several friends that are competent welders, so if I cut out the bad and make a patch, they could weld it in for me. What I can't afford right now is a big project. I can get into this if I can mess with it for a day or two and have it running/driving, and then spend a day at a friends house putting in a proper frame patch.
Sorry for the very long post. Mind if I ask for opinions? Does this all sound doable in short order barring no surprises? I need a reality check, so be brutal if you must.