A LITTLE HERE, A LITTLE THERE...
I work fifteen minutes here and 20 minutes there on this 1st generation Summit dream, as I am able. It is at least starting to look like something:

I am assembling in my home office, which is a glassed-in, air-conditioned Florida(?) room. The clean parts are fine in here, and this is the best I can do to provide a place for the paint to continue to fully cure.
I have installed all the 304 stainless cabinet parts. The back and left rest directly on the frame, and the large, heavy back piece has curves on top and bottom to loop around the two round frame tubes. No bolts used at all! Installing required loosening the bottom frame tube and then reinstalling it.
To protect from metal against metal scratching, the original design included some kind of rubber strips. Most of these were no longer useable, so I am using nomex felt, since some of the locations will be high heat.
I have been replacing the hardware with stainless in almost all locations:
The original scale had seen a lot of use over the last 24 years, including time just sitting outside unused. It was time for a refresh using one of my own decals based on the graphics work of a member Joel Young who I don't believe is active right now. I have seen a couple extraordinary restores of these scales on our board here. So impressive for someone to completely disassemble, carefully sand and perfectly repaint. I admit I wasn't up for that and settle for cleaning, lubricating and repainting.
Notice the wheels above. This Summit used the same tank slider mechanism that the earlier Genesis 1-5 and x000 grills used. It gets cleverly hidden behind the stainless panel. Weber ditched this design in favor of simpler (cheaper) rubber bumpers. I still think these wheels were the classy way to ensure free movement. Unfortunately, they were also a rust magnet, so everything has two sides. I was able to find exact fitting white caps at my local Ace to replace the broken cap on one side and the badly faded one on the other. The white tip on the pointer was found on Amazon:
YEJI 100 Pcs #8 White Screw Thread Protectors: Amazon.com: Industrial & Scientific
www.amazon.com
Well, soon I hope to clean up the rest of the stainless trays and start working on the gas connection and the side burner. Then it will be on to rebuilding the firebox and redoing the hood.
Little by little!