jon72vega
Well-known member
I know what it is, but I cheated LOL! 
Beautiful car!
Beautiful car!
A friend stopped by last evening with his latest purchase:
I'm curious, how many out there know what it is?
The funny thing about this is now I'm one of the last of my group of friends without an Italian classic. Despite the fact that I've been a proponent of small, often weird Italian cars. Maybe one day.
Same-same. Google Image Search FTW!I know what it is, but I cheated LOL!
Beautiful car!



















Thanks for following along for all these years!Excellent progress on a great project! Thanks for including us on your journey!



The rears are going to need more work to get aligned correctly. But with the center panel on, I had to get a photo of the license plate. My wife named the car Froggy and "Frosche" is german for frogs. I used the plural form of the word (with the 'e') because at a quick glance it looks like the word Porsche
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Love it!










I am enjoying myself, but I can't wait for mine to be in one piece!Looking Great! Picked up an SC last year. Seems 911 are the most fun in pieces according to the internet
-Kelly






.....must have been Lucas fluids...Did that Lotus leak all that fluid just backing into that spot?![]()
Did that Lotus leak all that fluid just backing into that spot?![]()
I was told that a connection to an auxiliary electric fan came loose and the car overheated driving on the city streets......must have been Lucas fluids...






I didn't end up scraping the original stuff off the bottom of the floors. After talking to the body guy (Jon at the MetalSurgeon) it didn't seem to be worth the effort or $$$. The original stuff was in good condition and, most importantly, still adhering well. There's only a few areas that were touched-up with Wurth and then the underside was given a coat of paint to give it a uniform look. I'm not sure what was used for the inside face of the new fender because it has a different texture - but then from what I've been told about the stuff it could be because of variation in temp or humidity.Coming together!
Didn't notice you mention it, what undercoating did you use?
I think you might be looking at the inside wall of the wheelwells - that is the original undercoating with a fresh coat of black paint! It was in good enough condition that it got sprayed after just a quick cleaning (911s at this time got black paint under the fenders). I have the previous owner that kept it (or at least its parts) in a garage for the last 30 years to thank for its condition.That's impressive it looks brand new/ fresh in your photos.
Thanks for reading along. I was originally hoping to get FROGGY or even KERMEE but both of those were taken. In the end, I'm happy because FROSCHE just makes sense on a green German car with bulging headlights. The problem is that I want to correct it by adding an umlaut over the 'o' with a couple small decals. My 7th grade German teacher would be so proudThanks for sharing. Love to see all your updates - the license plate Frosche is great! You seem to have such an active car community. It's great to see.


That's the stuff! The local body/paint supply told me that it was recently banned in CO. I tried ordering from several online sellers and each time either got blocked at checkout or, the one time it shipped, fedex turned the box around at their distribution center here.I'll mail you a can of the 3M stuff. It is nasty, but it works better than anything else.
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Can you connect it to power outside of the car? Maybe a bench power supply?I'm just worried that after all the tedious work to connect the wiring that the defrost heat elements aren't functional.
Exactly, I want to keep the original receptacles. How did you transfer the parts? Or did you send them your tongue for them to sew into a custom set? I've been casually looking for an oem set for a couple years so I should probably just get one of theirs.Nice, progress looks good! I replaced my reels and webbing with generic sets from Seatbelt Planet. Transferred over all the parts from my originals and kept the receptacles. Couldn't justify the cost of OEM.
-Kelly
Can you connect it to power outside of the car? Maybe a bench power supply?
I considered this but talked myself out of it because there are 6 wiring tabs and 20 or so lines of heating element across the glass. I don't know if I'm explaining this correctly but: If a line within a parallel series is broken, is the effect measurable? I thought that if I misted the glass with water then connected for X minutes, I should be able to see if one or all of the lines stay wet. The glass guy is coming tomorrow so I have a day to decide what to do.Continuity test to see if there is a circuit. If there are broken elements I'm pretty sure there is conductive epoxy repair material that you can use to span any breaks.


sorry, I didn't see your message until I posted the last reply.I've repaired the defroster lines on a car I had in the past and it works well. Just mask the lines and paint the liquid on the gaps and let it dry, works great. And yes, it would be easier to repair out of the car. just use a magnifying glass to carefully look at the grids, and any gaps will be easy to see.
I ordered these https://www.seatbeltplanet.com/i-30...retractable-seat-belt-push-button-buckle.html. Only kept the reel and webbing, transferred over my OEM SC parts, took it to a local upholsterer to stitch the end on. He charged me $30. I was apprehensive about sending out my parts and paying extra for their service.Exactly, I want to keep the original receptacles. How did you transfer the parts? Or did you send them your tongue for them to sew into a custom set? I've been casually looking for an oem set for a couple years so I should probably just get one of theirs.
Yes, this is the case... except for the tab that I glued back on. It is the middle of the three on the driver's side and unlike the others is not connected by a jumper wire to the others. The first and third are connected to each other as are the 3 on the passenger side connected via wire. Initially I thought that my glue job was bad, but the tab showed roughly the same resistance as the other two measured to any tab on the opposing side. In other words, the resistance across the grid was the same between any left-to-right combination. So my assumption is that the Permatex adhesive is holding and conducting as advertisedFrom the picture you showed I'm leaning towards the idea that they are spreading the load across the whole side and all tabs on one side are joined together.
WIth the additional cleaning, many of the spots that previously looked like gaps washed away. I think the heating elements nucleated some build up or someone's coke can exploded in the backseat. It also helped to visualize the grid when I backed the glass with a clean, white sheet of paper. Now I only have one line that looks suspect which should be easy enough to fix with the stuff @gilr mentionedUnfortunately that parallel design makes it hard to check the individual traces for continuity, but a visual inspection should be enough to spot potential breaks. It is very likely that a break can still be confirmed by touching either side of any questionable gaps and reading the impedance. A solid trace will have a lot lower impedance than a broken one (as the test voltage has to find a much longer path through the resistive elements.) So get a baseline on a known good trace and use that to evaluate any suspect area.
Thanks for the into, I was going to call around to see if the seatbelt shops would even take in customers' used parts, but your plan sounds even easier.I ordered these https://www.seatbeltplanet.com/i-30...retractable-seat-belt-push-button-buckle.html. Only kept the reel and webbing, transferred over my OEM SC parts, took it to a local upholsterer to stitch the end on. He charged me $30. I was apprehensive about sending out my parts and paying extra for their service.
Would love to see Conda sometime!
-Kelly
I had Auto Weave in Wheat Ridge do the stitching on the webs. Very interesting owner that does high end 911 restos.Thanks for the into, I was going to call around to see if the seatbelt shops would even take in customers' used parts, but your plan sounds even easier.
I saw somewhere else that you mentioned FuelFed, did you go? Have we been walking past each other this whole time? Let me know the next time you're going or if you're ever down in Denver