I in the first throes of a traveller restoration in conjunction with my younger brother. The car is actually owned by my father, but with us being relatively spritely youths to his verifable pensioner status it's obviously a lot easier for use to be crawling all over it. Anyhows, after poping in here several times to have a read-up of some subjects I thought I would ask a few questions of my own.
The car is a late sixties two-tone black and rust example - no prizes for guessing where the black ends and the rust starts - and like most other restorations we're steadily uncovering previous repairs, bodges and a host of rather alarming problems.
We made a start at the rear where the floor had been treated to some lovely bits of sheet metal and angle iron over the years to stop the doors draggin on the floor. A new repair panel has gone in along with the nearside corner and wheelarch top section. That bit is far from done however as the spring rebound plate is a mess and the box section is terminal from there running forwards to the sills. But it looks like the inner arch repair panel and some patient cutting out of the channel with repairs should sort out that little problem. Along with a few pints of cold galvanise.

So a gentle start, but the rear arch on the offside is rather worse. A cursory inspection so far reveals the rear channel is pretty much shot along the entire length of the arch, with glass fibre resin stuffed around the rear spring hanger and towing eye and rebound plate. Nice. The front section of the arch is badly patched and will have to be removed, and the front spring hangers on both sides waved goodbye to this cruel world a long time ago.
Moving forwards the picture really doesn't get any better. The car is just slightly bowed in the middle judging from the door gaps, and the crossmember and floor have reached the giddy heights of Stephen King-ness horror. In fact the floor is builging upwards and has split in several places, revealing the wonderfully delaminated crossmember underneath. Sills? Don't be silly.
So, the tinworm has had a street party on this car and with the next job being to tackle the offside rear arch area I'm wondering how best to support it. I'd sooner not drop the axle if I can help it as it's going to be very useful in double-checking the rear sping hanger location, but the chassis channel will need some cutting up to where it folds over to become the floor. So suggestions are really welcome on this.
The other thing I was thinking of was to take a deep breath, jack it up until the slight bow is removed and the door gaps are corrrect and then just brace the car up with plenty of heavy duty anglework welded between the pillars both front to back and side to side. I suppose if at least the pillars don't move then I'm in with a fighting chance of keeping it all in shape while I get busy with the cutting discs. Are there any pitfalls around this idea I should know about first though? I imagine the crossmember is going to make this a bit more complex of course.
I'll put some pics up a bit later when I have got the old box brownie out. I'm sure many people have restored far worse examples than this, but it's still a very sad sight at the moment.