kadman wrote: » At least I now know that when i take off the wing, and fit a nice pulling plate on 3-4 wing bolt holes, I can pull any bulk ripples, and get a good result. Then when I replace the wing, I can position it nicely to form evn spacing around the door and front boot. I am still surprised how tough the metal is. I have a few klokkerholm beetle panels, and they are about as tough as a coke can. Looking forward to this project:)
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » It's OK for him to charge German VAT if his sales into Ireland are below a certain figure each year. Think it's 35k. Above that, then he has to register and collect Irish VAT. This is why the price goes up at checkout on amazon.de, they have to apply the Irish VAT rate...
zilog_jones wrote: » Generally unless the seller is set up to handle EU VAT (like eBay or Amazon) you'll be paying it after it gets through customs - and how that is handled depends on who is delivering it.
kadman wrote: » Quick question. If I buy car products from Northern Ireland. Are they subject to Vat here, or in the Norf, Thanks, K.
kadman wrote: » Working on the white 72 Fastback, I needed to fit and glue new carpet. A job which I was dreading, especially since I used Evo Stick 528 which was a bugger before, trying to get the glue on the body metal and carpet. Especially when the glue does not like brushing on. So I used a different contact adhesive recommended for this, Stick2 by Everbuild. I Gal can at 39 euro, way cheaper than Evo Stick. It was brilliant for brushing on with a 2" brush, on the carpet and metal. And a super strong bond when applied. I just thought I would mention this in case anyone has a similar job to do.
kadman wrote: » Stocking up on NOS parts for the 67 Variant. I got my first delivery of good old original German metal. Two panels for the front apron. The outer curved panel, and the inner spare wheel panel.
Fratello wrote: » I thought the rust on the '67 was limited to surface rust. Is there rot or is it because of the front being a bit bashed?
Sleepy wrote: » I'd go full re-spray. You're replacing panels as is so will need to spray those at the least and, personally, I think the rat look is best saved for movie cars.
kadman wrote: » My thoughts would be along the same line too. Personally I think a rat look is a lazy solution to a resto. Plus it would be tricky to blend in new panels to old for a rat look. Although the new panels are in locations where they wont be readily visible. 2 under the wings, 1 in the front boot area, and the last one under the front bumper
jmreire wrote: » After going so far, I'd be all for a complete respray....the more you clean it up, the more blemishes you will find.Plus if there is existing cissing / cracking, it would indicate previous paintwork. And I'd be sealing these areas too,,,you dont want them contaminating the new paint. Getting the original front panels was a bonus.:)
kadman wrote: » Good result today:) Managed to put my home made dozer onto the variant. Applied some serious force, and managed to pull the bumper mount forward to where it should be. This took the wing away from the door edge, and best of all it took the large bulge out of the wing. Bonnet now aligned better too. It was the only way to pull the bulge on the wing, and it worked a treat. Job was done, saved on the price of a dozer, and now own one to boot. Its okay now to remove the wing, and do whatever tweeking i need to the bulkhead:)