Been a little while but there are some more developments on the way, mostly visual ones.
I have an interior + exterior detail scheduled for October 11th, and so I decided that it would be a good idea to give the detailers a more thorough way to do their job - I took all the plastic exterior trim off! Flares, bumper caps, and the one that runs below the doors. I’m painting them now. In addition, since the eagle is going to be down until sometime after the 11th, I decided to also tackle the leaky valve cover. Was a PITA to remove (as usual) but I got it without disconnecting anything, and only broke two of the hard vacuum lines in the process!
Here are some pictures. Hopefully they’ll show up properly, because I’m posting this from my phone right now.
Naked eagle. I wasn’t surprised that the flares had dirt trapped underneath them - however, I WAS surprised by the sheer amount of it. I shook everything out and had a massive pile at my feet... I ended up really loving how the eagle looks without it’s plastic flares, but the flares are much easier to paint to end up with the two-tone look I want that they’re going back on. Plus... I like how wide it makes it.
So I rattlecanned all the trim, but I did it with great care so it looks excellent considering the previous condition of the trim. Chips, dents, dings, scrapes... I can’t hide it all, but I got about half of it.
Sanded them flat, washed them, wiped with alcohol, wipe dry, two coats of primer, sand primer down, wipe with alcohol, one more coat of primer, final primer sand and another alcohol wipe. I’m up to 10 cans of Ford Toreador Red Metallic duplicolor paint at this point. Not the cheapest, but it looks excellent. Three or four coats of base coat, then sand the remaining imperfections and do a few more coats. Mostly flat - good enough for government work, as a few of my friends might say. I’m not looking for this eagle to be showroom material, it’s going to be a daily driver, but I do want two-tone.
This is where I’m at on the paint right now. Just got done applying the last clear coat layer to the bumper caps, tomorrow will be sanding and polishing them, removing the masking tape, then going through the same song and dance with all the other trim pieces. They look really beautiful...
Here’s a test fitting I did of a rear bumper cap earlier today. Now, for another essential tidbit of information... Those wheels and tires are going as soon as the detail is done and the car is finished painting. They’ll be replaced with these...
15x7 black steelies that will stick out further than the original 15x6 steelies,
Wrapped in a brand new set of 215/75R15 BFGoodrich A/T KO2’s with white letters.
The rear axle will also have 1” spacers mounted on it to bring the rear tires even in width with the fronts. It’s gonna look amazing. Clean white paint, clean red trim, and new wheels and rubber...
Yeah.
Anyway, I also mentioned removing the valve cover, well I decided to re-paint that too.
Perfect tool (sarcasm) for removing the rear valve cover bolt.
Here’s the painted valve cover. Cherry red. Shortly after that photo was taken I went along the top very carefully with a razor blade and scraped the paint away - all the raised areas (like the 4.2 logo) are now down to the base aluminum, shining silver. I’ll be giving the front and rear diff covers the same treatment here in a few days, when I flush and refill them.
I’ve also been wondering about 3D printing a ram air funnel, and cutting into the power bulge as follows. It’s a pipe dream, and since my mother (who owns the car, and will be driving it after I’m done with it) doesn’t like the idea it’s pretty much never going to happen. But a man can always dream, right?
Anyway, that’s what’s been going on. Lots and lots of painting. It’s my first real paint job and I’ve learned a few tricks - what to do, what not to do, et cetera.