Rear gable wall was framed and sheathed today.
Looks like everyhing is set to stand up the walls tomorrow.
Hopefully weather will not be an impediment.

The front 12 inches of the car is worth more than the rest of it!!!
Can you comment on your findings going with the Morton style building rather than conventional framing? With your final finishes,insulation, etc. it would seem that it would be a better fit to do it the standard way. I know that the original elaborate building was very costly, but this solution looks a little hard to finish out perhaps. I assume you looked at a normal stick frame option too, and that is a common question here.
Anyway, great project and beautiful site!
Just found your build mate! awesome looking shed, i wish i could have gone that big on mine! cant wait to see more progress.
As soon as i saw the zed i hit subscribe, ive got one too!
I have to say, did you mention yours was a track car?
Because your nuts if your racing her with a G nose front and headlight covers!The front 12 inches of the car is worth more than the rest of it!!!
G nose conversions are few and far between here In Australia, you usually have to import them from Japan. The lens covers are even rarer, and I've seen people asking 1k for a set
From the photo of your fuel pump set up, i can see it looks like you have polly bushes in the moustache bar? I bought some when i got a rebuild kit for the rear end of mine, but the shoulder of the bush looks way too thick compared to the originals. Did you shave yours down?
What V8 is in her? I plan on throwing a 327 chev or 308 holden V8 in mine, currently she is on a rotissarie as i fix the rust.
Check out my garage build, few photo's and links to my old girl in there.
Rudi.![]()
Cros13, Cool shed you have there. Yours looks similar in construction to the shop homebuiltbyjeff youtube porche guy.
Real headlight covers for the G nose is big money, but the ones I have a crafter our of some 3/16" polycarbonate and a heat gun. I made a template out of cardboard, cut the polycarb to fit, and then rivited the one side of the flat polycarbonate sheet to the car, and used a heatgun, a glove, and the nose of the car as a buck to bend the plastic to fit. The key was to go slow.
