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Oops

Kats66Pny

Active Member
I was messing aeound in the garage trying to make room to work on Gert and, well..... I guess air hockey tables don't make for good storage. LOL

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On the plus side I found a place to store fenders, hood, and the seats.

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you may want to keep an index file of where you put parts! amazing how things vanish! I'm not talking little things! Those look like some nice seats? Maybe time to sell the air hockey game~ more money for Gertrude!
 
Can't sell the air hockey table. It's not really ours. Belongs to my brother in law but due to divorce, he had to move into a smaller place and didn't have room for it so he asked if my kids wanted it. They played it for the first few weeks then got bored with it and it's been unplayed for almost a year now.

The seats are not the stock ones I was originally going to go with. They are from 2000 GT. I actually got them in a trade for my racing seats. I figure these will work. They are comfortable and look cool with the embossed pony on them. :thu

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The rule of thumb for restoring a car: three times the total volume of the assembled car. I found it to be reasonably true when I restored Midlife. One bay was for the chassis; a second bay for long-term parts storage, and a third bay for rear end, wheels and tires, engine, tranny, etc. A utility room stored the windows (front and rear) away from any action, and large fenders, hood, etc., where stored in another storage room that I rarely entered.

Good luck, Kat! You can always take over the kid's room and make them sleep together all in one room.
 
Nice seats... also if you've got open wall space up high, a couple of well mounted hooks is all you need to hold up a fender as they are pretty light, it works good if you plan to have them off for a long time...
 
"Midlife" said:
The rule of thumb for restoring a car: three times the total volume of the assembled car. I found it to be reasonably true when I restored Midlife. One bay was for the chassis; a second bay for long-term parts storage, and a third bay for rear end, wheels and tires, engine, tranny, etc. A utility room stored the windows (front and rear) away from any action, and large fenders, hood, etc., where stored in another storage room that I rarely entered.

Good luck, Kat! You can always take over the kid's room and make them sleep together all in one room.

Yup. I've still got all the glass stored under the bed all wrapped in old blankets, and used to have the spare room full of car parts, pretty much everything but the engine and trans.
 
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