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Months later things weren't working out so we were
asked to 'hang' the sheetmetal. More problems arose. The car
had been oversprayed, old masking tape left marks in the paint
and chips and nicks were abundant. Masking tape should always
be removed immediately. The trunk rack trim was installed using
six different types of screws. The top frame was assembled inverted,
other parts installed out of order or unrestored causing redundancy
(and adding cost!). The car owner decided we should complete
the restoration. Parts picked up from the other individual showed
up in assorted containers and cans, even trash bags. Few parts
were labeled, hardware was plopped into coffee cans. Switches
were dissected years prior and thrown into bags. Many parts have
turned up missing. As if things couldn't go more wrong, no photographs
were taken or drawings made during disassembly. Some video was
taken but the tape was stolen with the camera.
Customs & Classics handles disassembly and assembly very
differently than that. First, every part is labeled then carefully
and appropriately stored. No coffee cans or ice cream buckets
here. Pertinent information is noted on the parts tag. In my
opinion there is no excuse for careless parts handling. We use
an 'old fashioned' 35mm SLR camera to photodocument. Prints are
made and a set sent to the client each month. Video is not realistically
helpful. A technician can quickly flip through an organized photo
album, with video we would need TV/VCRs in the shop and would
waste valuable time fast forwarding and rewinding. Digital images
are equally inconvenient to review and prints are expensive.
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