House of Wax
Member
- Jul 21, 2011
- 381
- 0
1979 Lincoln Town Car revival
***Disclaimer***
If you have a.d.d. or get bored easily, this thread may not be for you... ^_^
First off, I call it a "revival" because to me, a "restoration" ends with a show car finish. That wasn't the end result here by far, but that wasn't the goal.
The vehicle is a 1979 Lincoln Town Car that belongs to my friend/neighbor Matt. It was his grandfather's car that he bought brand new and was passed down to Matt a few years ago by his grandmother. He had it tuned up to get it in good running condition a couple of years ago and came to me for help to get it back to a respectable condition appearance wise so he can start driving it again. It's not any classic hot rod by any stretch of the imagination, but it has sentimental value to him and I've never worked on a car like this, so I jumped on board.
In addition to not being cleaned for the last decade+, it spent it's life down the back roads of southern Illinois and was used by some other family members that were in high school later in its life, so needless to say, it need a lot of work. The car was covered in years of dirt and oxidation, and the sides of the car were splattered with tar that had been caked on there for who knows how many years. Without ever having worked on single stage paint before and not knowing how well the paint would come back, I wanted to test out the whole process on a portion of the car to make sure the outcome was going to be worth the time and effort. This is how the vehicle has been sitting in Matt's garage for the past couple years:
Before going any further, I gotta give a shout out to Mike Phillips for putting together this amazing article:
The Secret to Removing Oxidation and Restoring a Show Car Finish to Antique Single Stage Paints
That is one of the most informative well written detailing threads I've ever seen and was an immense help tackling this job. After reading the whole thing beginning to end I don't know how many times, I proceeded to go through the whole process on the trunk lid to see what the results would be. Here's what we ended up with:
Matt was excited with the outcome, so we decided to proceed.
stay tuned.....
***Disclaimer***
If you have a.d.d. or get bored easily, this thread may not be for you... ^_^
First off, I call it a "revival" because to me, a "restoration" ends with a show car finish. That wasn't the end result here by far, but that wasn't the goal.
The vehicle is a 1979 Lincoln Town Car that belongs to my friend/neighbor Matt. It was his grandfather's car that he bought brand new and was passed down to Matt a few years ago by his grandmother. He had it tuned up to get it in good running condition a couple of years ago and came to me for help to get it back to a respectable condition appearance wise so he can start driving it again. It's not any classic hot rod by any stretch of the imagination, but it has sentimental value to him and I've never worked on a car like this, so I jumped on board.
In addition to not being cleaned for the last decade+, it spent it's life down the back roads of southern Illinois and was used by some other family members that were in high school later in its life, so needless to say, it need a lot of work. The car was covered in years of dirt and oxidation, and the sides of the car were splattered with tar that had been caked on there for who knows how many years. Without ever having worked on single stage paint before and not knowing how well the paint would come back, I wanted to test out the whole process on a portion of the car to make sure the outcome was going to be worth the time and effort. This is how the vehicle has been sitting in Matt's garage for the past couple years:




Before going any further, I gotta give a shout out to Mike Phillips for putting together this amazing article:
The Secret to Removing Oxidation and Restoring a Show Car Finish to Antique Single Stage Paints
That is one of the most informative well written detailing threads I've ever seen and was an immense help tackling this job. After reading the whole thing beginning to end I don't know how many times, I proceeded to go through the whole process on the trunk lid to see what the results would be. Here's what we ended up with:




Matt was excited with the outcome, so we decided to proceed.
stay tuned.....