Weld dressed where tower crack used to be. This area will be sand blasted at the same time the flanges are. |
Right apron to rad support spot welds. |
Left apron to rad support spot welds. |
Left front of rad support. Notice how crooked the hood mount bracket is on this piece. Not one of Dynacorn's better jobs. |
Left front frame crossmember/rad support weld area before metal finishing. |
Right front frame crossmember/rad support weld area before metal finishing. |
Left front frame rail to crossmember/rad support lower joint. |
Right front frame rail to crossmember/rad support lower joint. |
Right radius arm mount bracket removed from frame. |
Left radius arm mount bracket removed from frame. |
New rad support welded into the chassis. Nice corner fit to apron and frame rail. |
View of new rad support and right apron. |
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Once all of the spot welds were cut, the panel came out very easily. |
Looking back at the firewall from the left front. |
Sand blasted the flanges after grinding all of the spot weld nubs down. |
Luckily, the flanges were also in very good shape. |
Fitting the NPD panel requires a lot of hand trimming all around the flanges to get the perfect fit. This is the front flange being trimmed to match the original panel fit against the firewall. |
This is the lower front corner of the panel marked for trimming. A good set of sheet metal snips works really well here. |
The fender flange must be folded over to duplicate the detail of the original panel. Once the bend is made, the drop flange is measured and trimmed to size. |
Looking down the top rail. Everything lined up nice and straight. |
The fit against the firewall was very good with the NPD panel. Not so much with the Dynacorn part. |
Another good fit for the NPD part. |
With several Clecos holding everything perfectly in place, I placed a few spot welds around the panel to begin the installation. |
Here's an up close view of a Cleco and spot weld. |
The new panel is now fully welded into place. |
Welds are now ground flush around the flange. |
Welded and ground flange at the firewall. |
Once the panel was welded in, the rear fender mount holes were added using the original panel as a pattern. |
Clecos are awesome aren't they? BTW, I wish I would have discovered the electric metal shear from Harbor Freight (http://www.harborfreight.com/18-gauge-sheet-metal-shear-92148.html) when I'd started my project. It works as advertised and I recommend it. Nice metal work and blogging!
ReplyDeleteLove 'em! Thanks for the heads-up on the metal shear. I have my heart set on a Kett electric shear but the price tag is a little steep! I'll definitely look at the HF unit!
ReplyDelete