GTA bodywork and overall longivity

Renault & Alpine General Discussion

Moderators: eastlmark, BIG_MVS, phildini, Test Moderator, Alpineandy

User avatar
User

stuart1927

Rank

Non Member

Posts

6

Joined

Fri Jul 03, 2020 12:30 pm

Location

Brora, Highlands


Has thanked: 0 time
Been thanked: 0 time

GTA bodywork and overall longivity

Postby stuart1927 » Wed Jul 08, 2020 9:37 am

Hi Folks

Having never owned a non-metallic bodied car, I was wondering if there were any specific things that needed to be done with respect to maintenance and/or protection? Is this pretty much the same as a metal bodied car?

Also, having watched an old video of the GTA cars being made, I was intruiged by the gluing on of the panels. Does this degrade over time and has anyone experienced detaching of panels from the subframes? Can this be repaired?

Sorry for the newbie questions, but I was curious to hear others experiences on the bodyshell and subframes.

sbb
no avatar
User

terry64

Rank

Non Member

Posts

83

Joined

Sun Aug 17, 2014 9:37 pm

Location

Wolverhampton, West Midlands


Has thanked: 10 times
Been thanked: 4 times

Re: GTA bodywork and overall longivity

Postby terry64 » Wed Jul 08, 2020 3:31 pm

stuart1927 wrote:Hi Folks

Having never owned a non-metallic bodied car, I was wondering if there were any specific things that needed to be done with respect to maintenance and/or protection? Is this pretty much the same as a metal bodied car?

Also, having watched an old video of the GTA cars being made, I was intruiged by the gluing on of the panels. Does this degrade over time and has anyone experienced detaching of panels from the subframes? Can this be repaired?

Sorry for the newbie questions, but I was curious to hear others experiences on the bodyshell and subframes.

sbb

Biggest problem with gta's strangely enough is rust. Areas to look out for are the rear subframe and suspension turrets, front cross member also the where the fibreglass is bonded to the sills. The average mot tester may not be aware of the rot spots and may miss them, also be aware of previous bodged repairs from the times when the cars were very cheap and previous owners went for the cheapest repair. Never heard of panels becoming detached but micro blistering is not unknown. A posts were cut with hp water jet and factory sometimes attached them slightly damp lets say so its not unknown to encounter some small bubbles at bottom of a posts. In saying that the the number of cars with totally original paintwork is probably now quite low. No doubt others members with far more knowledge than me will be forthcoming with more info. Your car is quite low mileage so may be free of these faults. It was my car in the JM video incidentally.
User avatar
User

stephendell

Rank

Club Member

Club Member
Posts

7463

Joined

Wed Apr 14, 2004 7:25 pm

Location

London


Has thanked: 125 times
Been thanked: 102 times

Re: GTA bodywork and overall longivity

Postby stephendell » Tue Jul 14, 2020 9:30 pm

Glue / bonding failure not on issue on any of the cars I’ve owned with the exception of the door hinges where failure can cause the door to drop.

No special treatment required for the paintwork. Clean and polish as a regular car.

As Terry says hidden chassis rust is the killer on these...
Trafic, Twingo GT, Vel Satis Turbo x 2, Clio V6 Proto Ph2, Vel Satis 3.5, Avantime, Alpine A610, GTA Atmo x 3, GTA Turbo x 3, R5 Gordini Turbo Mid Engine, Alpine A310 4cyl, Alpine A110, Yellow Smart


  • Advertisement

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 200 guests

Powered by phpBB ® | Renault' and 'Alpine' are trademarks of Renault S.A.S. or its subsidiaries and are used with kind permission of Renault France