Anniversary! — Toyota Celica, 1.8 liter, 2001
Today marks exactly one year since my wife and I bought a Selick. A lot has been done this year. The easiest way to see this is by comparing the photos:
Front
and behind
Also today this memorable day is marked by hard work. I did replace the rear curved beam on the whole. now the car is no longer clubfoot, the wheels are straight! The suspension is also finished, the car is ready for operation, only cosmetics remain.
To commemorate the anniversary, I will print this photo.
Mileage: 10 kmYes, all by yourself. there was no slipway, too expensive. Was bought a whole body.
My congratulations! Giant work. Was everything done on your own? Stapel took part? (I didn’t follow the bortovik from the very beginning)
Thank you. yes, the work is not small, but the most important thing is experience)
Thank you) The garage is removable, and it comes out cheaper than making a car on the side.
super congratulations… after your invitation, from the very beginning I’ve been following the car, but haven’t written anything yet… and now I want to congratulate you on your straight hands, mega willpower and patience… honestly, I’m very jealous… I’ve been wanting to sort out my whole car for a long time to know it… and understand what and when it can let you down ... but I don’t have a garage ((((I’ll go put down on your page =)))
yes, changed the body in the end. it turned out to be much more budgetary than restoring a broken one.
body took for 40
so you changed her kuzof as I ponel? because what is black in the photo is the current for ferrous metal. slovenly to restore.
why did you buy the bodysuit?
I'm not talking about hemorrhoids. I was interested in working with Celica. This is an important experience and confidence in the car, I know everything, I installed and screwed everything myself.
if you try to estimate the net time for work, then probably in one and a half to two months you can do this. I then collected money for half a year, looked for spare parts, and then for half a year I sometimes worked on the car.
Well, it's acceptable! and a lot of hemorrhoids in the course of work? was it a lot of time?
Well, I mean that after we bought it, there was no way back, although at that time I had little idea which way I would have to go.
Well, I don't agree here. someone would have thought "no, I will not restore from a pile of metal. I'd rather take something simpler", and in this case the dream would have remained a dream. and you had the courage not to give up on your dream - that's wonderful!