hambone
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Here's some pics of my M718A1 I'm restoring.
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It was just that nice, only minimal surface rust, had a hard time keeping my emotions under control when I found this one. Story was it was stored in a hanger at an AFB and used as a runabout jeep up into the 90's, then stored in a shop until I bought it several years ago. Took me a couple months just to scrape off all the thick CARC paint that my sander or stripper wanted no part of. Took years just to collect all the hard to find ambulance parts it was missing, but it was worth the wait. My last project was a M151/Titan jeep(aftermarket body) it was a lot of work but turned out ok.Nice work so far! Wow, did you have to do any work to the body or was it just that nice? That is one of the nicest bodies I've seen. Keep up the good work and keep us posted.
Thanks CW, will post pics as I progress, my M715 is next on the list.I am in awe!
Top fit much better out of the box than expected, heard all the horror stories about the shrunken canvas, it will need a little stretching but overall, not too bad.
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Ah, yes. We love our furry faithful assistants.Thanks for the comment John, yup, mans best friend, here's my golden enjoying the shop life, I hardly ever work alone.
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So, I've been wondering if the CARC paint stripping process is necessary. Unless you're going for a Concours Restoration and you plan to recreate the factory original pattern I can't imagine that removing the CARC paint would be a good use of time. If it's chemical resistant, so well adhered that only special strippers will take it off, and will accept additional primer/base coats on top of the CARC, then why bother stripping it? Couldn't you just scuff it to give it some tooth and paint right over? Maybe I'm missing something or not fully appreciating your plan. Any insight would be useful since I'm thinking about bedlining my M998.Got the hood and grill painted and most of my mounts. did I mention how much I love removing CARC paint.
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The CARC paint on my jeep was cracking and peeling in a lot of places causing surface rust under the paint, some places it was a 1/16" thick, would have taken much sanding to cut through plus you have to deal with the toxic dust. I wanted a descent paint job, so I decided to remove all the carc, I'm sure the military would have just painted over it, It was a lot of work but I would do it the same way again, I may be too particular.So, I've been wondering if the CARC paint stripping process is necessary. Unless you're going for a Concours Restoration and you plan to recreate the factory original pattern I can't imagine that removing the CARC paint would be a good use of time. If it's chemical resistant, so well adhered that only special strippers will take it off, and will accept additional primer/base coats on top of the CARC, then why bother stripping it? Couldn't you just scuff it to give it some tooth and paint right over? Maybe I'm missing something or not fully appreciating your plan. Any insight would be useful since I'm thinking about bedlining my M998.
I'm lucky enough that mine isn't rusted, but I get why you're taking the time now. With surface rust you'll have a time getting anything to adhere.
Thanks, Maddawg, they are unique and hard to find the elusive parts, took several years to find all the parts to put it back right. This is what it looked like when I purchased it, was told after service it was used as a runabout jeep on an AFB, where they removed all the goodies and added hardtop and front section of ROPS and that nasty CARC paint. Plus I got 2 M38 wheels.Wow, what a great transformation! Love the oddball MVs, everyone's seen a -151, but the -718 is an interesting beast.