18-02-14, 10:51 PM
I've done my share of large projects (mechanical and otherwise - some have taken 3-4 years to see through) and the only advice I can give is to break it up in to small parts and prioritise. So first is the frame, suspension, brakes and other important parts for a fully working rolling chassis. Next is a running, stock, engine with no issues, then move on to the exhaust.
At this point, you want everything as close to stock and don't worry about the little details (like decals and body work etc). Lay a solid foundation. The reason for stock is that its a known quantity and should anything go wrong you have a lot of help to work out the issues. If you start messing with things, it gets awfully complicated awfully fast when trying to figure out what's wrong.
I'm up for helping with labour, but you seem to be interested in doing that yourself. Best of luck.
At this point, you want everything as close to stock and don't worry about the little details (like decals and body work etc). Lay a solid foundation. The reason for stock is that its a known quantity and should anything go wrong you have a lot of help to work out the issues. If you start messing with things, it gets awfully complicated awfully fast when trying to figure out what's wrong.
I'm up for helping with labour, but you seem to be interested in doing that yourself. Best of luck.