framerails on my 88 t-top

From what i can tell there is no "easy" fix to frame rot, you pritty much have to cut out and weld, what condition is the car in? is it driving, or is the drivetrain out?
 
i just bought it yesterday and drove it 588 miles all the way home from new jersey to michigan it looks like the passenger side is rotted away all the way to the firewall to the point that it broke away from the shock tower .the driverside is also going bad .i have an 87 body that is mint but is not a t-top would like to see which is the easier route to restoring this car cutting out the sections that are bad or just replacing the whole front end.i don't plan on driving it anymore worried about it caving in. how much would it normally cost to replace a front end if a shop did t?
 
You'd have to call around, a idea you might want to concider is cutting the t-top roof off and putting it on the mint car, and swap the doors, just a idea. i bet the t-tops is sweet...
 
Flavadave4 said:
cut out and weld in new pieces from donor car. make sure everything is sqaure when you weld and tack first so nothing warps
I agree, if it's something you can do, and if you want to really build the car, you can just pull the drive train and take care off all the under body rust, all engine bay rust and rust proof/paint it, if i had a way to pull th engine, that's what i'd do..
 
billison said:
You'd have to call around, a idea you might want to concider is cutting the t-top roof off and putting it on the mint car, and swap the doors, just a idea. i bet the t-tops is sweet...

+1

When I dropped my headliner the other day I noticed something interesting. The T-Top frame is simply riveted into the car. If you drop the headliner and drill out the 20 or so rivets, the whole T-Top frame will just drop right out of the ceiling. You could...in theory....drop that T-Top frame out of the rust-bucket, and make all the appropriate measurements on the good car, cut the roof (while supporting the center of the car so it can't flex) and rivet the T-Top frame in. From there its simply a matter of swapping the doors and the weatherstriping.

Anyway, Thats the way I'd probably do it. Unless your dead-set on having 2 cars. heh. Then your up for cutting and welding a LOT of new metal underneather there. If its gone up to the strut tower, its gonna take a LOT of work.

Congrats on the Fox3 T-Top purchase. Theres not to many of us around. Whichever way you do it, always rock w/ the tops out.
 
thanks guys ,i really want to keep this car not cut another being they were rare ,i just blew 2200 on this car and i already have another 83 t-top donor which is also a rust bucket. i wish i would have thought of that before i bought this car.i'm thinking i can have my friend cut out the sections that are rusted and reweld in the new sections.instead of dropping the whole front end atleast that is what it looked like to me today.this is the last year for t-tops for this car so i'm sure it may well be worth restoring.hey prime lord how bout some pics
 
the 83 t-top has been gutted and i plan on pulling the motor and trans soon and than giving it away to a friend who is going to try to piece it back together, t-tops are awesome but they leak .atleast this one i just bought does have minimal floorpan damage. as soon as i get it looking half way decent i'll post some pics .right now it needs alot of work.
 
the 83 t-top has been gutted and i plan on pulling the motor and trans soon and than giving it away to a friend who is going to try to piece it back together, t-tops are awesome but they leak .atleast this one i just bought does have minimal floorpan damage. as soon as i get it looking half way decent i'll post some pics .right now it needs alot of work.
 
thanks, talked to a friend who owns a bodyshop i am going to take it to him they do great work.another question, i looked at the title and nowhere does it say t-tops so i'm guessing that the vin number must have some kind of code for t-tops in it.
 
Yeah, if you get a VIN decoder, you'll find the T-Top code. Titles ususally don't list things like that.

Good luck w/ the project man, its taken me almost 6 years to realize my dream of restoring my T-Top GT.