I’m back with some updates, looking at the dates on the forum it was December 2020 when I last posted. Obviously the pandemic put a stop to things for a while, so the first half of 2021 was a bit disrupted. I don’t have the time to work on the car every day, I have a job and customers need projects delivering so I try to reserve Friday for Jowetting (is that a word?) this gives me about 45 days a year after holidays and cold winters. After travel, lunch, collecting bits and all the other things that happen I’m probably putting in 250 hours a year, or six weeks. On the plus side I’m not paying for my labour.
I’ll start where I left off last time. The rear clamshell was test fitted to make sure everything aligned. I didn’t have much to work with so it was a case of measuring the distance to the chassis rails and making sure the centreline agreed with the bulkhead position. With a bit of effort it was as close as it was ever going to be.
The new sills were welded in place and given a quick blast of primer, these are the galvanised ones from JCS so need cutting down before fitting.
The next task was to start on the A pillars at the bottom of the scuttle where they always dissolve, I had already cut them back and given the steel a coat of DEOX to give me something to work to. I don’t know where these replacement parts came from, or I can’t remember, they were in a box of bits in the garage. They might have been an old batch of JCS ones, either way they don’t fit. They are a different width and the folded seam where the door closes is in the wrong place in relation to the outer panel. I think Chris had a similar problem with one of his restorations and made a new set from scratch, in hindsight I should have done the same but I didn’t. I did manage to make then fit in the end but it would have been much easier to scrap them and start again. The seam still doesn’t line up properly but it’s not visible with the door closed.

I had to cut the front section out to reduce the depth do this needs welding back in, the front of the sill is bolted in place while I weld everything up. This worked quite well so I left the bolts in for now. The side panel of the scuttle had been repaired in the past and the metal was in good solid condition, the weld was a bit messy but solid so I left that alone.
With the rear fitted and the doors installed it was time to check that everything still lined up again.
The boot lid still fitted in the opening so we were making progress.
The door gaps were OK too, a bit on the large side at the back but the front was too tight so the hinge spacers were changed to move the door back a bit. The B pillars were rotted out, that nice crunchy powdered aluminium that a Jupiter likes to make. I found some replacement panels in the random bits box that looked almost new but had purple (Comanche metallic) paint on them. This suggests that at some point they had been fitted to NXH, Geoff’s Jupiter during his psychedelic phase, but neither of us could work out why they were removed and changed. Still free bits are free bits even if they need painting.

The rear shelf and back panel were test fitted. These were in a very bad state as they had been folded up before storage, it wasn’t me as they arrived like that many years ago. During the build I have tried to keep every panel original if possible, everything is stamped with the body number 60 and is correct for the car and I wanted to keep it that way. After much bending and hammering I decided these panels were just about serviceable, just! They need patching up in a few places and they won’t win a concourse but they are the ones fitted when it left the factory.

The replacement B pillar was fitted and tacked in place. I had tested an aluminium brazing kit on some scrap plate to see if it was possible to join the new aluminium to the old birmabright aluminium and the results were quite good once I got the gas temperature right. It’s not an easy job though and I’m not 100% convinced it is the easiest way of joining to bits of metal but if it flows properly the joint is remarkably strong. I’ve used this technique a few times on various holes in the wings where mirrors and an aerial had been fitted but that is the same metal all round and is a bit easier.
Rear wings fitted, there is a fair bit of flex in the rear clamshell that bolting the wings up helps but this can distort the boot opening so we did another test fit to make sure it hadn’t moved too far. Vernier callipers on a Jupiter panel gap is probably taking things a bit far.
Boot lock was stripped and restored.
As were the bonnet hinge boxes, new hinges were sourced from JCS because one has gone AWOL. It will probably turn up one day when I’ve finished.