A quick bit of background, I bought the car as a student back in 2002 and set about learning about car mechanics, how to wave goodbye to cash at the motor factors and yet still have multiple breakdowns. When i got her she had about 80,000 miles on the clock and still felt like new inside.
My car as it was a few years ago, the photo was taken on a No-rice Guildford to Brighton run.

This is how she looked one wet rush hour Friday morning in January last year after setting off to a rolling road tune up. I had to be towed off the roundabout by friends due to dumping most of my oil, later found to be a bent filter. The radiator was fine!

Once she'd been recovered home (thank you breakdown insurance) the battle with the insurance company started and 6 months went by. Some money in my pocket and keeping the car was the target. The payout wasn't great as the assessor wouldn't budge much on price because of the 200,000 miles on the clock.

Come the summer and a friend securing a large workshop and storage area my car moved off the parents driveway much to their relief. I also started hunting down parts that were needed, after some haggling with a breaker's yard, this was collected.

One muddy but straight and rust free front end replacement, sadly the driver's side wing and bonnet were scrap due to dents and holes for a bonnet ornament (why would you?). A brand new genuine VW bonnet was found on ebay for not a great deal of cash, the only problem was it was in Newcastle upon Tyne and I was in Bristol. The seller did offer to courier it but I was worried that the bonnet would arrive with a big dent in it and only be fit for scrap. So a road trip it was, a friends Audi estate was borrowed after applying a beer bribe and the bonnet was mine, also managed to combine the trip with collecting a good drivers wing from the midlands.

So there was a basic plan, pull it as straight as possible, chop out the bent bits, attach the new straight bits and paint. It all sounds so simple put like that!