picked up a rough 87 Grand National - how to approach project?

paradigm

Greasemonkey
Aug 28, 2024
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Picked up an 87 Grand National clean title car with 98k miles from NJ. VIN checks out as does the RPO sticker / WE2 code. The car is a bit of a mess, with the wrong trim bits on it, rotted areas on floors, areas cut out of the rear driver fender, doors not in good shape with holes along the bottom, and original drivetrain is gone and an incomplete LS swap sits in it. Frame looks solid, most body panels look decent, trunk is solid. A lot of the wiring has been modified due to swap, unsure if the motor and transmission are operable (5.3 LM7 + 4L80e with no driveshaft). Not sure what condition the brakes are, and how ready the fuel system is.

How would you guys approach this project?
Work on the floors first? then drivetrain?
Before I get the motor running, I want to paint the engine bay which will be a good bit of work on its own removing the inner fenders, other metal bits, preparing everything, and priming / painting. I have never done metal work or welding. I am hoping to buy a mig welder and learn on the floor.

grandnational01.jpg


grandnational02.jpg


grandnational04.jpg


enginebay.jpg


And the floors:
Driver side looking forward, rotted area:
floor_driverlookingforward.jpg

driver floor looking rearward:
floor_driverlookingforward02.jpg


floor_driverlookingrear.jpg

passenger floor looking rear, soft area:




floor_passengerlookingrear02.jpg


floor_centerlookingforward.jpg






floor_passengerlookingrear03.jpg


Areas of floor pan suspected to need replacement:
floor pan highlight.jpg
 
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start where ever you will but prolly best thing to do is get it moving under its own power as a motivator first. imo
I can definitely see things from that perspective, but also think it could be a good time to attack the big stuff while it's apart. Tough call.

1: Get it driving under its own power before worrying about the body. Definitely helps with motivation when you can drive it.

2: Do the big work (floors, paint the bay, etc.) now since it's already sitting, undrivable. Unless you need the extra set of wheels it saves having to dismantle as much later.

It's worth noting that any car is worth more if it can be driven, so you make a good point.
 
Everyone starts with the mechanicals first. I did too. I would've been much more motivated to continue to work on on a car that looked really nice, and only needed mechanical work. I would get everything body wise done, except paint, first. Probably because that's the part I don't want to do and motivation can wane quickly in a large project.
Only other thing I can suggest is make a plan and stick to it... this should take at least a month. Figure out your budget, plan of attack, where the parts you need are coming from, etc.
 
I did body work first, mainly because I went on deployment at the time...
It saved the car, on one hand, other I have a custom paint code, painter is long retired (painted in 03/04 winter)
And I've got gouges from pulling the engine..

Personally I'd do mechanical first... If doing the whole floor pans, it's easier with engine transmission out

Also easier to move projects around when they move under their own power as well

Split the stuff up into "bite size" projects and don't start another till that's "done"
Grease pen a check list on a window.. can split list in to project categories as well
 
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Looks like the rearend was replaced with a 7.5 rearend.
 

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