14th August 2016
Could it be? Is this an actual update of things that have happened with this car? Why yes, yes it is! This is posted on several forums, so I may repeat myself a little while I fill in the gaps for those forums I haven't updated.
The running problem was narrowed down to three causes, the first being the brand new condenser on it's way out (after about a mile of use), the second was that the ignition timing was way off and the third was that the plugs were in the wrong order. Forums are super for flushing out helpful people and it was one such that came along and diagnosed this and sorted it and got the car running in about half a minute if that. So big thanks yet again to Scaryoldcortina. Reason for the timing and plugs being muddled was me getting into that terrible spot where you know there's a problem and you try and fix it only to find whatever you do makes it worse and then you can't remember how it all was to start with.
In turn, that meant I could finally move the Princess under its own power which is vital for the last bit of welding. The clutch is now VERY noisy and doesn't work very well, it's been less than great for the past four years and I do have a new clutch kit to go on so I'm hardly surprised it's finally given up. The duff condenser makes running rough but works well enough to get the car in and out of the unit until the replacement component arrives. The brakes work. I pumped up all the tyres and wobbled into the unit this afternoon so I could actually do some work on the old boat.
It was actually fun, even though nothing is really as it should be, to trundle around in this car again. After using the Rover for the past year the Princess feels enormous, and very slow, and the steering feels quite heavy. Still, we got in and Mike helped me remove the doors for the job ahead.

I spent most of today just cleaning back the mess that was the old sill. It had been sort-of-welded along the bottom edge and tacked once every 3" or so (except for the 6" either side of the B pillar where there was NO welding at all) on the top edge and then SMOTHERED in filler. There was so much filler it had oozed between the old line of the original sill and the replacement. It took a very long time to get it all back to good metal. Also removed a big chunk of filler from the sill-to-arch join which was hiding, unsurprisingly enough, some holes and thin metal. This area was up for replacement anyway and will be part of the next stage of repair.

The other area is the sill end. I'd already repaired what I could inside the car but I now need to let in some smaller pieces for the sill rail, the sill closing panel and the inner arch. I also need to rebuild the outer arch where it had rotted away. None of this is particularly complicated, it's all just fiddly little patches. I'll be making it structurally good rather than pretty because most of this won't be seen when the new sill goes on.

Finally, an overview of what I achieved. The old sill had gone very thin and was much more damaged than the driver's side (which I'll need to replace in the future, but can stay put for now since I've already repaired it). Happily, the inner sill with the exception of the above is absolutely solid and cleaned up very nicely, I was actually quite surprised there wasn't any creeping rot hiding in here.

I am quite busy with work but my schedule is more manageable this week so I'm hoping to get a bit of time in every day to do a little bit of repair work this side until the weekend when I hope to fit the full outer sill and get it painted. I'll also repair the door bottoms and sort out the blistering paint - which started showing itself as micro-blisters 4 years ago and so far has always been down to excessive use of filler - before they're refitted to the car. I'm not worried about perfect paint and finish, I just want to eliminate as much rust and rot as I can while I have things in bits.