Keith looking at your original post I thought this might help -
If your car is a Grande or Mach then it would also get addition sound deadener applied to the floor pans after most of the car was assembled (minus driveline and exhaust it appears
1– After the unibody has been fully assembled (going to skip all of the body seam seal items) and the trunk lid, rear valance (hung by all the mounting screws but not pulled in at the bottom edge), quarter panel extensions (on but spaced away from the body) and doors attached. Seam sealer was applied to all panel edges such as roof lines, trunk and door openings, in the trunk around the wheel wells, bumper brackets, taillight panel and around the top and front edge of the upper door hinge on each side.
Next sound deadener was applied to the interior side of the rear quarter panels, trunk seams, along the seams in the front fender wells and rear wheel wells as well as some interior locations.
2- Exterior body was primed first it appears, with a red oxide primer sealer then a light gray surfacer.
3- Undercarriage primer and/or batch combination was applied next. Red oxide from the firewall forward (frame, inner fenders panels and the exterior surface of the shock towers was next applied. If both areas were shot with red oxide it is not unusual to find two different tints of the product on a car.
4- Some seams and the inner seat belt reinforcements where chalked next. The quarter or floor drops and the seat belt points were applied with a brush or pushed out of a gun then smeared with a brush or thinner dipped rag. These seams are noted in the pages to follow,
5– Interior color is applied next to the A pillars, area around the defroster and radio speaker hole and the interior of the doors. Following this areas of the interior were blacked out depending on body type
6- Exterior color was applied with some over spray flowing onto the undercarriage. The further a part of the pan hung down the more overspray it received. Can be a little or allot but never the whole floor pan. In the rear wheel wells the area received a nice coat of paint in most cases and over spray/ nice coat often found its way onto the exposed rear frame rail that are visible from the wheel well.
In the front wheelwells the body color typically extended onto the firewall section and the rear inner fender panel, normally stopping short of the shock tower though on occasion did extend into it.
7– Next the engine compartment paint is applied. This was applied to all of the engine compartment up to the firewall pinch weld (above the pinch weld to the base of the windshield opening also was painted black depending on when the car was built and certain model types)
The face of the radiator support received a nice coat of engine compartment black and often the black extended to the forward inner fender panel or at least overspray from the radiator support is evident. None of the stops and starts of paint in the inner fender wells appear to be exact and are more a reflection of the worker and his effort that given moment.
8– Next the pinch weld was blacked out. The outer edge was a soft edge so many painted just back mask the line. The over spray from this application would again cover some of the undercarriage as it would naturally. Again the more part of the pan hung down the more paint/black out it received. The amount of overspray generally would be less the distance that the body color traveled as it was applied with less pressure
9– Once the front fenders and the car assembled (just short of adding tires and wheels) were installed, the front wheel wells were blackout with sound deadener (except for Shelby's typically this year). The application could be best describes as between a little or allot but normally included as least the front splash shield, inner fenders (before and after the shock tower), the firewall section and the rear splash shield. On some cars an addition pass with the application wand was made up over the top of the bottom of the fender.
Hope this helps - now back to work