In true keeping with a Mayflower, the pace is slow. The first month I have gone around almost every aspect of the car to look at what needs replacing, what I may be able to make myself (I run a manufacturing firm) and what needs immediate treatment to prevent further deterioration now it is out of a garage and on a drive.
First... I had to do something about the interior. Not the typical place to start but the smell was ripe and I wanted to see if there were any nasty holes under the carpet. As the rubber has perished everywhere, with the autumn approaching I am bound to get water ingress into the vehicle in some corners. So if I can treat the floor with some decent paint this will stop any rust running away from me. This would also allow me to clean the leather seats and replace the foam as needed.
So... seats out! On both seats there are two screws and two bolts that go through the floor into square nuts captured in a thin gauge metal box. Quite a simple design that seems to have captured most road grime. I got 3 out of 4 fixings free on either seat without drama but resorted to getting the angle grinder out on the last ones. I will probably replace these all with riv-nuts.
The carpet seemed original. Although that is only a guess based on how deteriorated it is and the materials it was made out of. There was a receipt/label (I believe installers label) stuck to the bottom of the tar like layer beneath the carpet which, I assume yet again, is sound deadening material. Most of it had turned brittle but some of it was pretty firmly stuck to the floor.
I found all sorts of other treasures under the seats such as a 1/2 penny from 1971 and a number of 90s tax discs.
Finally, with the carpet out I could see that, aside from one tiny weld and some pitting in the driver/passenger footwells, the floor was in very good condition.
I scraped as much sound deadening material and lose rust away as I could and painted it with matt black POR 15. Before anyone tells me I missed a spot, I prefer to paint section by section, mainly for ease (try crawling around inside a car with wet paint everywhere!) and also, where possible, I would like to try and maintain the original paint and patina. In this case, as the floor pan is out of sight and under carpets I was not too precious. Voting for longevity over appearance. The car came with a new set of burgundy carpets so I can get those back in and trick my brain into there being more progress than there truly is.
I considered doing the same to the engine bay, but there is hardly any rust (just surface rust) and so I think I will go for a clean/degrease following by a few layers of wax to capture any rust and protext the patina as much as possible. I have a few test bottles/containers of wax to try to see which produces the best results.
Till next time!