Thanks ALL for the advice, suggestions and sharing your experiences. What I've got from all this is the following:
1. Keep ALL parts - rusty, damaged, etc.... throw NOTHING away.
2. Photo & photo more
3. Bag everything, label the bags & store in labeled bins, etc...link to photo's for reference.
4. Prep the floor - don't work on the dirt floor if can be helped.
5. Start disassembly - moving from front to rear.
6. My idea of a "budget" should allow for tripling & then some.
7. Engine & gearbox removal - my back is aching thinking about this... but I need to find a friend with an engine hoist :-)
I will check out the blogs shared - looking forward to that...thanks for sharing guys.
And I will consider doing one myself. I did not do a good job of capturing for posterity, the motorcycle resto and old house resto work I've done over the years, and regret only having disconnected photos, and even more disconnected memories of what all that work took, and especially the before & after images.
I do have the applicable shop manuals and the Haynes/Dunstall restoration guide which has been read through a couple times over the years in anticipation of this day finally arriving. And of course there is the wealth of knowledge on this forum that I am sure I'll be calling on for help.
At my wife's suggestion I've been making some inquiries around town for a suitable covered work area that I can rent to work in for a year or so. Seems like a reasonable idea - to at least get the rolling chassis, bulkhead, engine & drive train work done so maybe the outdoor work shop will fade off into the sunset....
Cheers for now....
Jim
1. Keep ALL parts - rusty, damaged, etc.... throw NOTHING away.
2. Photo & photo more
3. Bag everything, label the bags & store in labeled bins, etc...link to photo's for reference.
4. Prep the floor - don't work on the dirt floor if can be helped.
5. Start disassembly - moving from front to rear.
6. My idea of a "budget" should allow for tripling & then some.
7. Engine & gearbox removal - my back is aching thinking about this... but I need to find a friend with an engine hoist :-)
I will check out the blogs shared - looking forward to that...thanks for sharing guys.
And I will consider doing one myself. I did not do a good job of capturing for posterity, the motorcycle resto and old house resto work I've done over the years, and regret only having disconnected photos, and even more disconnected memories of what all that work took, and especially the before & after images.
I do have the applicable shop manuals and the Haynes/Dunstall restoration guide which has been read through a couple times over the years in anticipation of this day finally arriving. And of course there is the wealth of knowledge on this forum that I am sure I'll be calling on for help.
At my wife's suggestion I've been making some inquiries around town for a suitable covered work area that I can rent to work in for a year or so. Seems like a reasonable idea - to at least get the rolling chassis, bulkhead, engine & drive train work done so maybe the outdoor work shop will fade off into the sunset....
Cheers for now....
Jim
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