For those of you that have finished your builds, about how long did it take you? I'm still a ways off from even starting but I just got a promotion that made this dream possible.
Thanks ahead of time for the help.
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For those of you that have finished your builds, about how long did it take you? I'm still a ways off from even starting but I just got a promotion that made this dream possible.
Thanks ahead of time for the help.
2.5 years. You can complete one in 300-400 hours though. Just depends on how by-the-book you do it.
I am at 2 years and 3 months and still have to install windshield. Do wiring and button up interior.
4 months on a MK III Includeing paint. LOng days 6 days a week. This was a non donor build so didn't have to dismantle, clean or paint donor parts. Did not build the engine.
Kenny
It will depend greatly on your experience with this sort of project and what you consider "done."
I went from a driving donor to street-legal 818 in about 200 hours, but have way more experience with this sort of stuff then most. Since then, I've put in another two dozen hours or so tweaking, and probably have another 8 or 10 in bodywork before I'll be happy with it.
Build start to go-kart: 11 Months
Go-kart to registered: 20 Months
It still needs to be painted.
Larry
As listed above, I'm about a year and a half. Really depends on how much time you can spend on it each week. The hours listed are correct, it's all about how much time you have to spend on your project each week.
3 years and still doesn't run. :( A couple of kids and changing your mind/plans a bunch of times really slows down a build.
Took me 2 years almost to the day from kit arrival to completion for my 818R (not sure it is ever 100% done but that to me is part of the fun) I did have my donor 6 months prior, striped and had most all of the donor parts I was planning to use prepped refurbished and painted when the kit arrived.
I didn't set a timeline other than to try to spend at least 8 hours a week working on the car, which is about how it worked out. It kept me motivated and allowed time with family, vacations and other activities to prevented burn out. Also allowed me to spread out the spend on the car and verify/change my build and parts plan.
As the experienced builders have advised and I think it is important is to create a build plan, and set goals on what you want to get done during the hours you are working on the car.
I kept a To Do list taped to the car and cross items off as I completed a task and add items as the came up. I seem to add more items to the To Do list than cross items off the list until I was 3/4 of the way through the build. But that process has served we well on my projects.
3.5 years, 2 kids, 1 business, and one other race car later.....I'm still going. Lol
I am at 8 months from arrival date. Finishing the body work paint and interior left. Once the windshield is in it can get an inspection sticker. The frigid temps have slowed work down a bit yes we are getting a snow storm tonight and tomorrow mother natures April's fools joke!
Ares,
I created a spreadsheet with the parts I needed and wanted and priced them out and added 20% to cover miscellaneous plus $2000 for parts I didn't think of, can send you a sample just pm your e-mail address.
The to do list started before I got the car, cleaning, replacing, refurbishing Subaru donor parts, depowering the steering rack as an example. I requested the manual 6 months prior to chassis delivery and used it as a reference to start my assembly to do list. the build plan would always change some each build day. I my case it was due to changing something, needing supplies/waiting on parts or decision or just something I wanted to do differently.
LOL sorry shouldn't be a problem now.
See my timeline in my signature. Granted, I didn't to any paint or body work.
66 days, don't do that. Trust me.
Plan on 300-500 hours and be prepared for 800.
I am 2 years into my build and only about 70% complete. Spending about few hours a week.
Are we counting hours spent here on this forum? 2,000+? :)
For the folks who log the hours do you just have like a time clock you punch in and punch out when you leave the garage for the day(lol)? I can only count by the years cause I'm in the garage everyday after work unless family or girlfriend things are going on.
over 3600 hours, but we rebuilt/custom fabricated a ton of stuff with no donor car. To do just a basic, with a good donor, 8 months to a year at 16 hours a week would be my estimate.
NEVER!!! LOL Keep telling myself its the journey not the destination, who really "completes" a build?
Had "Driving" Donor for a year. Started donor tear down in September 2016. At wiring stage now (April 2017) Weekend Warrior style. 8 to 16 hours a weekend.
There is always that bolt or item I should have saved from the donor but can't locate but I KNOW I saved...now I got to order...(BTW does anyone have extra lower radiator grommets lying around?)
Also seeing other people's idea's and approaches, mods, inspiration, calculated risks, etc. will add time and dollars...lots of dollars...
I think the right way to look at it is how much time to registration or first race. I see a bunch threads that go continue years after registration or first race.
3+ years, twice I didn't touch the car for 6 months, had a second kid, started my own business, and building it the most difficult way possible. I'll never be done, but hope to be on the road this year.
I built my coupe in 3 months