This should be an interesting build - missed what drivetrain is going in there.
Back in black...
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David
I should have known you had it figured out, and being a uniframe/body car its probably more structurally intact that removing a body from a frame type.There is a good bit removed, but it's mostly the cosmetic portions. Structurally the car is still very solid. The trunk torsion bars tie into a brace that connects the sail panel structure to the wheel tubs. Along with the unibody structure that ties the roof to that same tub, it all holds together very well. You just can't push it around by the fender, because you might distort a key body line.
It will need temporary bracing as I remove more material from the floor and minitubs
David
Back in black...
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David
With the car blasted, all the rust and damage is easy to see. I pulled out my project notebook and filled 3 pages with notes for future minor/major repairs. There are three groups:
Cut out the trunk floor; rear rails appear solid from the inside:
- Panel replacement - rear deck filler, quarter skins, trunk pan, etc.
- Rust rehab - isolated pitting or through holes
- Repair of the repair - previous owner was unfamiliar with the terms quality or patience. There's lots of work to be redone.
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David

Me too. Growing up, there was a red and white R/T in the neighborhood, and at 15 years old I tried to make a deal with my dad to get it. His 'no' was firm. The suburban was already sitting in our driveway.This era Chargers are a favorite for me...
I'm summarizing the work I did before the Suburban's intercooler build, so this is all from Fall 2015. But North Texas Customs does work quickly - took them 5 days to blast and epoxy prime.Holy crap that was quick!!!
That's Dodge for yaboy they really did some shoddy welding back in the day huh?
I guess so. I found them in a few places. Stay tuned.boy they really did some shoddy welding back in the day huh?
The lead in photo on the thread shows the car pretty much as received - primer gray with sins underneath. Originally, it's a 1970 R/T 440 4-barrel automatic, but the powertrain was not part of the deal, and what the PO offered wasn't original anyway (318+727). You could call it a "very good roller." Original paint was EF8 dark green metallic; 881 Chargers were so equipped in MY70. A non-vinyl roof car, the rust on top is almost non-existent.
As for my color plans, I keep coming back to a darker version of the original green - nearly black - with subdued golden-yellow head and tail stripes to visually shorten the car. It's all designed to highlight some of the minor body modifications I have planned (modern panel gaps and functional venting for example). This could all change tomorrow. It's a work in progress, and my thoughts right now are almost entirely focused on chassis rigidity and suspension choice.
I'm still cleaning up and organizing from the suburban's intercooler project; under proper supervision, of course.
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David

Thank you. The garage has been a fun project on its own.Off topic do you have a link to your suburban build thread so I can check it out?
P.S. I love the paneling in your shop and how you have all of the parts hung on it.