1936 Packard

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Went to Pick n Pull today and cut the roof skin out of an 85 Cadillac. I wanted one from a 90's Lincoln but the only one there had a sunroof. The Caddy scalp has a nice curve to though and is a decent alternate choice.
 

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Do you have close up shots of your body mounts?

The front mounts are the originals, I made a short pedestal to mount them. Mid and rear mounts are tabs cut from 2x2 tube welded to the sides of the frame. I cut a hole in the 1x2 floor subframe and welded the cutout circle into the bottom to double the thickness so the mount bolts don't pull through. I'll use some snap plugs to cover the holes under the carpet. I'm a believer in solidly mounting the body to the frame to tie the whole structure together, if it was rubber mounted there would be problems with the front sheetmetal and running boards moving around.

What did they charge for the roof panel?

$15.00 Canadian, so that's like $1.00 US....:rolleyes:
 

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Thanks guys.:)
Got the major pieces of the floor cut, rolled, beaded and tacked in. Needed a slight bubble in the tunnel to clear the shifter arm, also a step in the rear floor to clear the upper control arms - they were still a bit close so I had to hammer a couple small lumps in the floor to give them clearance too. Ran out of welding gas so it's all just tacked in 'till I get a refill.
 

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Great work ZZ, you do always make it look so easy.

I may have missed this in a different post but why do you need the 85 Caddy roof? Is the packard roof shot? Just wondering.

-Chris
 
The Packard didn't have a roof... It was an insert, I believe.

Correctomundo - typical of many cars until the late 30's when manufacturing processes and the development of larger stamping presses allowed them to make the roof from one piece.
This car had the usual fabric insert with a wood frame, wire and burlap underlay. One of the last visual reminders the automobiles' descendance from buggies and stagecoaches....
 
Correctomundo - typical of many cars until the late 30's when manufacturing processes and the development of larger stamping presses allowed them to make the roof from one piece.
This car had the usual fabric insert with a wood frame, wire and burlap underlay. One of the last visual reminders the automobiles' descendance from buggies and stagecoaches....

Thanks for clearing that up. Learn something new everyday.

-Chris
 
Interesting note about the roof. I had wondered the same thing, as the shape was very close to original, I wondered what the heck are we doing here??

Nice match up.

I have a Buddy (I think only miles from you) who is rebuilding a 38 Packard. He's going original on it, but has a 37 parts car, complete. I showed him your pics to see if a rat rod might be in his future. He said he wants a roadster, instead of a sedan - like that would stop a rat rodder...
 
Interesting note about the roof. I had wondered the same thing, as the shape was very close to original, I wondered what the heck are we doing here??

Nice match up.

I have a Buddy (I think only miles from you) who is rebuilding a 38 Packard. He's going original on it, but has a 37 parts car, complete. I showed him your pics to see if a rat rod might be in his future. He said he wants a roadster, instead of a sedan - like that would stop a rat rodder...

Anything from the mid-thirties and older is likely to have had a factory roof insert. I guess that knowledge isn't as common as I thought it was :p
 
From what I've read, nobody had a large enough press to stamp out a roof panel in one piece until I think 1936, hence the cloth insert in cars built before then.
 

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