So, it turns out that I can find plenty more things to delay the inevitable

. Anyway I have now made a start, although I did manage to waste a load of time. I sold my Rangie and bought a BMW X1 4WD to carry me about until the SC is (finally) completed. Nice little car, so may end up keeping it for horrible days. And I cleaned up the garage again in anticipation of the inevitable and ordered a huge pile of bits from RosePassion, Matthew @ Type911, Design911 and (because Matt no longer supplies them) a couple of stat/thread from PP - not got everything I will need to complete the resto yet (never know what joys lie ahead when I open the engine), but certainly most - well I hope so anyway.
When I was dismantling the car, I disconnected the oil lines from the engine and tank, then found only 1 fixing along the sill and another on the inner front wing. Other than that, the complete lines fell off the car

. As mentioned previously, the oil cooler trombone has been brazed to the sill lines, so to allow me to try to use pressure and heat to 'blow out' the various dents in the sill lines, I had to disconnect all lines from the thermostat. With lots of heat and patience, things were going well until removing the second long line. Unfortunately, the threads on the stat broke off, losing about half of the threads

, hence the order for thread/stat savers. I have also ordered an M30 die (from China, so massive lead time). I want to run the die down the aluminium threads to clean them up. Rather than paying £50-100 for a die from the UK, I've gone cheap at £17 from China. It may not be very good quality, but should do well enough for just cleaning 4 aluminium threads (I hope).
I then stripped everything out of the drivers door. No pictures, as it is just the same as the NS door, but the other side !
Anyway, running out of other things to delay the sills, I finally maned up. I have also tried to capture some of this on my GoPro, and if a) I can work out how to make the videos half decent, and b) can work out where to put them (YouTube ?), then I'll link here

.
So first order of play was to follow Barry's advice on jacking up the car, and off the wheeled dollies and onto axle stands at the rear. I used the jack in the middle of the front to adjust the height of the front, then gradually wound up my caravan stands to just touching each side and removed the trolley jack. Sounds simple writing that but I faffed around a lot. I have an oak garage, with a mahoosive support just by the rear wheel arch and wanted the car as close to that as I could so that I have plenty of room to access the other side later, without needing to move the car. Anyway, using a trolley jack from the side of the car of course makes the car move sideways when you jack it up, so a bit of fiddling and faffing to avoid the wheel arch hitting the support ensued.
I'm sure you can envision a car jacked up, but for those that don't have a 'mind's eye' (like me - I cannot close my eyes and see anything) ….
Next came door gaps. Remember that when I got the car, my gaps were horrendous - I still think that the NSF wing was poorly replaced and the door was simply moved to be in the middle of the hole. Anyway, a few shims got me to here (notice how far the door has been moved relative to before I added the shims !).
I don't think that those gaps are too shabby now

Where they are somewhat tight is just where MOT bodge welding has added additional plates / thickness.
The next decision was where to cut the NSR wing. I need to access the kidneys and the lower edge of the wing is bodged but also the Targa stiffening plate has completely rotted away and where the Targa hoop cover bolts on has also seem Mr Tin-worm.
So my proposed cut line is here …
Any contrary advice ??
Finally, onto the sill. Forgot to take a still photo, but I cut out the main part of the sill, just leaving an inch or so around the outside. I then drilled out the spot welds on the top edge of the doorstep lip. The remaining bit of the sill here refused to come out, and I found spot welds on the vertical lip, on the inside - didn't expect these, but drilled most of them out. Having pulled off the residual top part of the sill away, I found that only the rearmost 4 or so spot welds holding the inner sill to the door step were right through to the outer sill. I hadn't needed to drill the rest out !
The sill to floor join was just a series of 'normal' welds, and a quick kiss with the cutting disc thinned them enough to rip off the bottom of the sill away, leaving just a little grinding to finish thigs off.
The inner sill looks in great condition on the whole (aside from where I managed to put a chisel though it). I'll wire brush and treat where the outer sill joined, but so far it looks strong. The top edge looks like this
Only surface rust by the jacking point, apart from the top edge which will get some love
And the lower edge

[
Even the lower jacking point looks really solid, although a fair amount of grot and snot to remove from the previous outer sill and lower rear wing repairs.
The kidney bowl is mainly absent, but here's hoping that I find the metal behind is a good as the inner sills once I get the outer wing out of the way.