I have also done a frame off restoration. If you are swapping out a complete rolling chassis (all suspension parts are on the "new chassis") and you are just going to install your engine along with the fuel system, it will probably be a good weekend project. If you are going to just swap a bare frame and have to transfer everything from the old to new....that will take time. I figure a better part of maybe 4 days or so for a DIY. It is not all that difficult to remove the frame with the engine/tranny/fuel system intact. There are 12 bolts (if memory serves me correct) that hold the body to the chassis. 2 are in the luggage compartment, 6 are in the car itself (2 are the actual bolts that mount the seat belt clip to the frame) under the carpet just below the center console on either side and two are in the engine compartment. You will them have to disconnect and pull the battery cables from the body of the car along with disconnecting the parking brake cables, Steering link, heater hoses (the two that go to the heater core inside the passenger side), Vacuum hose going to the Brake master cylinder booster, the two brake lines going into the master cylinder, the one line going into the master clutch cylinder, disconnect the front wire harness going to the frame, disconnect all wires in the engine compartment going to the engine, all ground wires in the engine compartment going from the frame to the body and also in the front of the car, disconnect the A/C line going to the accum (BE VERY CARFULL DOING THAT! Make sure you have the system vacuumed out of all R-12 safely and that you take great care removing the hose from the accum) and remove the shifter boot along with the seal below it from inside the car. Once you have done all that you can then lift the body off the frame as Nick did (I did it differently when I removed it, but did it his way when I put the frame back). As you lift the Body off the frame keep an eye out for any stray wires or lines that you may have missed when disconnecting everything. Once the body is in the air and the frame will clear it, roll it on out. One bit of advice, I removed the front wheels and laid the front end on a dolly. This brought the front of the chassis down a little bit ( so you don't have to raise the body to far for it to clear) and it also allowed better control (steering) as you roll the chassis out. It made it allot easier to move the front end around instead of kicking the front tires around to steer it. You can do all this by yourself but suggest that you have a friend or two to help you out to have an extra set of eyes and for safety reasons. Steve Rubano --- In dmcnews@xxxx, shirazcupala@xxxx wrote: > In a recent post, Nick reference his site where there are pitures of > his car with the frame separated from the body. See the link below > for the pictures. He says it took about 5 hours to do the > separation. It looks like both pieces are in tact except being > separated. I know this can't be entirely true because of certain > hoses and lines. However, these pictures make me wonder if it is > relatively easy to swap frames in case of frame damage. I originally > thought that you'd have to take the whole car apart. > > Does anyone have any knowledge of how much time/effort would be > involved in just swapping the DeLorean frame? > > thanks, > shiraz > > --- In dmcnews@xxxx, njp548@xxxx wrote: > Nick 1852 Http://members.aol.com/njp548