Restoring THREE E-Type Bonnet Lower Valances!

This blog shows no less than THREE E-Type Bonnet lower valances being restored but smoothing and repairing the outer skin, and replacing the rear main support member with a new piece.  This is a GREAT way to save your lower valance without spending a fortune on a new one – which have a poorly shaped mouth, AND always seem to be a little too wide…

Over the past month I have been on a big push to pump bonnets out the door.  I try hard to keep everyone busy around here, and so Brent disassembled and scraped pretty much every bonnet in sight, and then John blasted all of them.  By the end of the Summer, bare bonnet parts were EVERYWHERE!

It actually got so bad that one day I picked up all of the parts of one bonnet and loaded them into the truck for blasting, and I loaded up the wrong wings into the truck.  I finally realized it when I was sure that these wings seemed alot better than I though they were!  Then a few weeks later, I picked up a blasted E-Type inner valance (most people call them the air ducts or air tubes), and for about a minute, I didn’t know whose bonnet it belonged to!  Of course, this all got worked out and NOTHING got mixed up – it never does around here, and I NEVER swap parts between customers – that is just wrong and a REAL slippery slope…

Let me tell you, this NEVER happens with me – I always know what everything is just by looking at it – even if it has been around for 10 years!  For one thing, most bonnets have a pretty strong “signature” – they are a certain Series, color, and have their own flavor of damage – rust, or wrecked, etc.  So that blue, wrecked Series 1.5 stuff over there is Bob’s, etc…

One other thing happened right around this time that really started to freak me out about how much stuff is around here.  I was headed up the stairs one day and grabbed the original coil from my ’67 2+2 which was sitting on the steps.  Just out of habit, I looked at the date, but it said “5-61” instead of the “5-67” I remembered.  I must have looked at it 10 times, in different light, with and without reading glasses, but it still said “5-61”.  Then I went to the box of 2+2 ignition take off parts from this Spring, and the “5-67” coil was in there!  So then I’m REALLY freaked out – “What the hell is this!?!”  A good “5-61” coil is actually a real prize – I would know if I had one!  Oh No, I finally have so much E-Type junk I can’t keep track of it anymore – OMG – I’M A HOARDER!!!

Anyway, with about half a dozen average Series 1 bonnets around, and they were all blasted – I finally reached my limit.  I came out into the shop one evening after dinner and made 6 sets of numbered, thick aluminum “tags”, Gave each customer a number, and went around and wired the tags to every bonnet piece the shop.  This included a huge pile of “MM” tags for stuff we own ourselves.

I’ve finally got just about all of the tags back onto hooks on the wall – things are getting cleared out pretty well now.  AND – I’m happy to say that I was NOT losing my mind over that coil – just last week a friend of mine (whose ’61 OTS I restored one Summer during college) stopped by and said, “Hey – did you get that coil I left on your stairs this Summer?”  Mystery Solved!

This entry was posted in - All Blog Posts -, E-Type - Bonnet Restoration, E-Type Component Restoration, E-Type Custom Panel Fabrication. Bookmark the permalink.