Thanks I was wondering because this car was a one owner car when I got it, I bought it off a little old lady that bought it brand new and it was completely original when I got it and I ddidn' think grandma would have been under the car sprrsing undercoat! And I know I didnt! Hahaunder coat looks "original" but that could mean factory or dealer. if you do the molasses thing, which works, you can get it cheaper at a feed supply
Good progress! I've had pretty good luck solvent wiping with mineral spirits and top coating with flat black. If it’s sticking I'd only remove it where you are going to weld. Touch up with the rattle can stuff.Thanks I was wondering because this car was a one owner car when I got it, I bought it off a little old lady that bought it brand new and it was completely original when I got it and I ddidn' think grandma would have been under the car sprrsing undercoat! And I know I didnt! Haha
If I clean it good with soap and water do you think paint would stick to it? I dont want to take the time and effort to remove it!
I'd say you did good to save any of them. EVERY one twisted off when we swapped my son's 7.25. I used ones from an 8.8.There is always that one nut that has to be a PITA! The everything else came off easy I was surprised. Although these ubolts have been replaced before so they wasnt super rusty but this one made it all the way to the end and got stuck I ended up bringing out the breaker bar and it twisted it off.
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Yea this is the 2nd time iv done these. The first time I had to cut them off with an angle grinder. These weren't no where near as bad as the first time lol.I'd say you did good to save any of them. EVERY one twisted off when we swapped my son's 7.25. I used ones from an 8.8.
Thanks what would be the best way to weld the holes? Typically I would weld a piece to the back and fill up the hole but there is no way to back it. I dont think my welding skills are quite on par to fill a blind hole hahaMig Welder
Sure they are. In fact this is good for us dummies. All you're trying to do is plug a hole. Little zap. Let it cool. Little zap. Let it cool, etc, etc. Grind it flat. Get a scrap piece and practice first. Which is good advice for any welding project, really.Thanks what would be the best way to weld the holes? Typically I would weld a piece to the back and fill up the hole but there is no way to back it. I dont think my welding skills are quite on par to fill a blind hole haha
What setting do you use for sheet metal on your Hf?Takes a bit of practice to make and break the arc, let cool, and repeat. I have the same machine and it is doable. I want one of the eastwood welders real bad though.
Listen to me. Don't practice on your car! Get some scrap to practice on. And yes, I would actually speed the wire up............I done some more striping this morning and attempted to weld the holes closed....EPIC FAIL!!!
I don't know if it's my cheap harbor freight welder or just my lack of welding skills but it looks worse now! Lol. No matter what I did it would just blow a hole straight through it. My welder only has a high and low adjustment and a wire speed control. I put it on low and the wire on 1 and it still melted thru it. I attempted to just tack around the hole the build it up and it would still burn a hole. I guess I'm just gonna cut out the entire section out and try to piece it back in. I think its gonna be a challenge to get it tacked in place without cutting thru it. I think I'm gonna practice on my old truck door! Haha
Good!!! Little grindin' good as new.I got some done this morning. I got the holes in the firewall patched its not finished but it's no longer a hole! I forgot to take pictures. I will get some later.
Thanks its came a long way but still have a long way to go! I'd like to see your 66 barracuda!Lookin good, believe me if make holes you learn how to fix,em.Getting my mig education on a 66 Barracuda.