A minute has passed.
I spent the last week and a half following Blazer Bash getting the shop all cleaned up, putting away the small bits and pieces that tend to get left out, sorting leftover hardware, breaking down and recycling cardboard, sweeping out all the grinding dust that has collected in corners and nooks, recycling used oil, getting one more tool setup on casters (hydraulic press), and on and on. It's just a basic reset now that the truck is not under perpetual construction. That's a pretty good feeling, and once everything is finally clean, it's time to make it filthy, with progress.
For starters, I am tired of negotiating the concrete step every time I need to pull the powerpack from the car. So, a set of jack stand dolleys from our friend Beck have make working in a small space a lot easer, even with a stack of 40s looming in the corner.
Handier than pockets on a shirt. Patience extended.
I yanked the powerpack to get better access to the cowl. I shrunk the the new center flange and got it about 95% fit, and began addressing a serious pet peeve I have with Mopar cowls - that darned wrinkle that comes from forming. Most builds ignore this or filler over the 1/8" crevasses. I took some body hammers to it.
Most of this is done with the high crown working off a 2x4 wood dolley, then on dolley with a low crown, and then planishing again with the low crown and a flat metal dolley. This panel beating session was about 6 hours, but I was figuring a lot of stuff out as I went. It's not going to be a "no filler car," but I am going for a low filler one. I'd like to just do a coat of heavy build primer and sand.
All tacked together. Small fitment details remain, but I can persuade gaps to close just by welding in their direction.
Pretty nice little weekend.
David