Fire Damaged 1937 Morris Eight Tourer

Fire Damaged 1937 Morris Eight Tourer

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Blib

Original Poster:

45,944 posts

211 months

Sunday 22nd June
quotequote all
This afternoon I helped move this recently refurbished Morris 8 Tourer from its fire damaged garage.



The poor thing was caught up in a fire which spread along a row of outbuildings in our village, after a garden bonfire got out of hand.

It wasnt the only car caught up in the conflagration......



The car has great sentimental value to its owner - an elderly lady whose late father bought the car from new.

The car almost survived unscathed. However, our neighbour had covered it in layers of bubble wrap, which has meltied onto all of the upper, exposed surfaces.

Our neighbour wishes to renovate to car once again. Has anyone had experience of cleaning melted plastic from bodywork? I assume a full respray and interior refurbishment is what's in store for the poor thing?

.





Safely in its new home.

99t

1,020 posts

223 months

Ouch! Both lucky and unlucky in equal measure.

No words of wisdom to share for the interior, but I was doing a little PDR the other day and the way isopropyl alcohol releases the "plastic" from a glue gun from paint made me wonder if it might be worth a try on a small area?

Likely different plastic so might do nothing, and there is probably some paint damage from the heat even if the plastic comes off, but not much to lose at this point?

Blib

Original Poster:

45,944 posts

211 months

Thank you. I shall pass that on.

thumbup

Sebring440

2,704 posts

110 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Blib said:
Thank you. I shall pass that on.

thumbup
I wouldn't bother.

The heat has melted the plastic into the paint, and (it seems) into the leather. Worst case, bare-metal repaint plus full interior retrim.

You might get away with attempting to remove the plastic from the leather and then refinish, but the labour involved (unless you do it yourself), would be more expensive than the retrim.

Plus, is there further heat damage to additional rubber/soft components throughout the car? Engine internals? Wiring?

Presumably all this is going to be covered by the wayward neighbour's insurance, but they'll pay for a "market value" for the car and not for the full restoration that it now requires.

Sad situation.

Blib

Original Poster:

45,944 posts

211 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
I had feared as much. frown

The insurers have quoted £4.5k to £7k. Depending on whether my friend wishes to keep it or not.

SS427 Camaro

7,466 posts

184 months

Wednesday
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Blib said:
I had feared as much. frown

The insurers have quoted £4.5k to £7k. Depending on whether my friend wishes to keep it or not.
Stand your ground re what they value it at

RustyMX5

8,622 posts

231 months

Yesterday (14:12)
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I have no idea if this is even still available but I remember my father using Carbon Tertachloride to clean stuff. Even the most stubbornly stuck stuff seemed to just rub away after an application. I think I still have a jar of the stuff knocking around somewhere.

silentbrown

9,856 posts

130 months

Yesterday (14:23)
quotequote all
RustyMX5 said:
I have no idea if this is even still available but I remember my father using Carbon Tertachloride to clean stuff. Even the most stubbornly stuck stuff seemed to just rub away after an application. I think I still have a jar of the stuff knocking around somewhere.
Get rid. VERY carefully. Wikipedia page on this extremely dangerous stuff has a section "Famous deaths from carbon tetrachloride poisoning".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_tetrachloride

RicksAlfas

14,028 posts

258 months

Yesterday (14:31)
quotequote all
silentbrown said:
Get rid. VERY carefully. Wikipedia page on this extremely dangerous stuff has a section "Famous deaths from carbon tetrachloride poisoning".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_tetrachloride
But... they're not very famous are they?
biggrin

Sorry to see the car Blib. Hope the owner can get it sorted.
Which wally has a garden bonfire after the hottest/driest period of weather we've had for ages?!

RustyMX5

8,622 posts

231 months

Yesterday (14:39)
quotequote all
silentbrown said:
RustyMX5 said:
I have no idea if this is even still available but I remember my father using Carbon Tertachloride to clean stuff. Even the most stubbornly stuck stuff seemed to just rub away after an application. I think I still have a jar of the stuff knocking around somewhere.
Get rid. VERY carefully. Wikipedia page on this extremely dangerous stuff has a section "Famous deaths from carbon tetrachloride poisoning".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_tetrachloride
Oh I'm well aware that its dangerous stuff and should be treated with extreme caution but it's exceptionally good for cleaning nasty stuff.