My fly fishing buddy, Mark, helped us by making a screen door that I never would have been able to achieve. He's a cabinet maker and did some incredible work on a screen door made of birch.
I am ready to get the tin off the front and replace the paneling and the braces which were rotted out. There was only one obstacle...the PO had used three tubes of silicone on the window and the sides.
First I wiped the silicone remover on and then scraped with this little guy |
Had to move very slowly as to not hurt the tin |
Whew! Finally. |
Very frustrating five hours.
Finally got the window off and will have another five hours invested just cleaning the residual silicone off both the window and the tin to reinstall it correctly.
Then it was up to the roof to remove and reset the little vent and the air vent.
Both had copius amounts of silicone that was baked hard in the sun. it was considerable fun to try and get those hex screws to start moving again and it took a pair of pliers to slowly get them started.
The PO put silicone everywhere! |
Finally got it off and found another wasp nest inside of it.
The next job is to remove the main air vent frame that was, you guessed it, had more silicone gooped around it then made sense. I will have to make a platform out of 2 X 6's and plywood so i can work on that. Once that is off and cleaned, I can pull the front tin and start installing new birch and framing.
I think I need to do some more of this......
Before I do some of that.
Hello, it looks like I will also become the proud owner of a '59 Catolac Deville this coming Monday, so I did a little poking around on the internet this morning and found your blog. I'm just curious if you finished restoring yours? Your blog just stopped! :o)
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