Linux Mint 11 Rulez....
Why so long. I took mine into paint 2.5 months ago and its not even thru prep yet but why the hell does it take so long.
QuoteWhy so long. I took mine into paint 2.5 months ago and its not even thru prep yet but why the hell does it take so long.Normally, because body shops are not in the "restoration" business.I live in a fairly small town. There are four body shops within the city limits. I know all of the owners. I see them throughout the year at the kids school/after-school events, have a beer with them at the bar when our paths cross, etc. I helped one of the owners build his new house. Again, it's a small town.If I brought a classic Mustang to any of these shops and asked for some minor body work, prep and paint, I know for a fact that two of the shops wouldn't even touch the work. One of the shops would F*&$ it up, and the other would say the same thing they told Stan.... "leave it and we'll work on it when time permits, but don't be in any hurry".In this day and age, 95% of the auto body businesses are in bed with the insurance industry. Their livelihood depends on it. If they're out farting around on a "restoration" while an insurance vehicle sits waiting, their insurance work will disappear and so will they. There's just not enough "restoration" work to keep an auto body shop afloat.While two years is at the long end of the spectrum, two and half months is not at all. Six months to a year seems to be the average. Also keep in mind that the "prep work" is 98% of the skilled labor. Once the prep work is done, a shop flunkie tapes off the car and rolls it into the booth for the remaining 2% of skilled labor.... then he rolls it back out and buffs it. While the prep work could take six months, paint and buff is only a matter of a few hours.As with any other aspect of maintaining your classic Mustang, your best bet is to do it yourself.