Guys you're talking chalk and cheese.
Back in the day you had a modern (then) production line, all new panels from fresh moulds on an arrow straight fresh chassis. The shell was dipped, seam sealing was course and quick, panels went on and stayed on with the exception of the doors/engine lid etc, etc. Paint then would have been hand finished......oh, plus a few hundred guys working a line that was designed to be as slick as possible.......
.....and then the cars started rotting out within ten years!
Today if you're taking a totally bare restored shell (not just a respray), no matter how good Barry's or any metal restorers work is, there'll be a mix of new and old metal, and there will a huge amount of effort involved to get every surface flat and true. New panels are rarely straight and these have come off and go back on again umpteen times to maintain and check gaps. We have always tried to replicate the rough factory seam sealing but then always seal every gap the factory didn't and disguise it in a way that isn't obvious.....there's no production line, no continued flow of work on crisp new metal and it all takes many, many hours.
When I mention trying to create a car that looks factory 'new' rather than 'restored', I'm not talking about glossy paint finishes, overspray or painting under the hood......I'm talking about a straight, clean, fresh looking car with uniform paint that isn't over done, decent gaps and a car that looks like it has zero filler in it rather than one with half an inch in places.......and that all takes time!
I dare say Adam could get get his car prepped and painted in a little over 100 hours but seriously doubt that's the car he wants!
Sorry for taking this thread off track
