BFH and a block of wood. No problem.
Hey Now, that's getting into Carpenter Territory.... don't be steppin' on my Hustle, Yo? Lol. Just kidding BrotherBFH and a block of wood. No problem.
Thems universal tools. LolHey Now, that's getting into Carpenter Territory.... don't be steppin' on my Hustle, Yo? Lol. Just kidding Brother
Right On Brother! They WORK on All Kinda Stuff! (Evil Grin Included)Thems universal tools. Lol
I have seen high end shops do that. It actually works well. Get it really close and then use a little filler.BFH and a block of wood. No problem.
Agreed. I have always only heard good things about their installation center. I bet they help you outHave you called AMD?? It's been two days since you started this thread. No one on this forum is going to be able to help you like AMD can.
Not everybody can. I am guessing that less than 10% of us can do that level of work.You are almost always better off to do it yourself.
I think a lot of guys could but just lack confidence or facilities. But still, i'm sure a lot of guys just are not interestedNot everybody can. I am guessing that less than 10% of us can do that level of work.
Saw of Your Choosing. I'd go with a Gas Chainsaw, personally... but you're a Marine, I could probably mail you one of my old drywall key hole saws and you'd cut it up with that. Or a K-Bar!I have a log 30" long and it won't fit in the woodstove, how do I fix it.
Pictures would be nice.
Amen Brother! Old Jerry from J&J down in Stark (he's a Mopar Man from way back) he had a super be out there in the yard for sale many many years ago over 30 years and someone hacked up a quarter like that man the warpage was Unreal I know for a fact he didn't do it he probably acquired it that way he's been in the Parts thing for a long time. I actually sold some anybody stuff years ago good guy manThat's why you assemble the car with al the new panels to adjust the fit, tack the welded panels, and disassemble to finish the welding. Speaking of welding, lot's of spot and stitch. No continuous beads.
Yep, last seen Jan 28 2023.Boy, the OP sure has been forthcoming answering all the questions after he asked for help. <rolls eyes>
The problems don't have anything to do with the fact that its a 50+ year old car. Its a stamping quality issue. Without serious bodywork the panel fits will be much worse than factory. The Mopar logo'd rockers fit nice though
Started doing body work professionally in 72, even the new cars require a board and a hammer sometimes to get the fit you are looking for, sounds primitive but until fortunately it's the truthWhatever you have to tell yourself.
The panel fits on these cars were NEVER perfect, not even when new. Body measurements could vary by as much as a 1/4” from the factory. What fits one car might need significant adjustment on the next, and the gaps sure as hell were not all the same. And no reasonable person should ever expect any replacement panel to fit without bodywork, that's not real life. And that's not just Mopars, that's universal. If you need your replacement panel to fit perfectly out of the box you're destined for failure.
The door gap widening an 1/8” requires something moving. The quarter panel just has a flat fold that gets welded directly over the door pillar upright. So, in order for the door gap to change, the door pillar upright had to move. And subframe connectors won't stop the door pillar upright from flexing back an 1/8", or even a 1/4". Not what subframe connectors do. Maybe the panel pulled the door pillar upright, but that happened as part of the installation. Since you said you had the doors in place when you did the quarters, I assume you had the gap right before you started welding. Which means your welding process pulled the panel. Otherwise, the time to address that 1/8" difference was before you welded the quarters on.
If you want your car to have perfect gaps after replacing a substantial amount of structural sheet metal, it will require a ton of work and adjustment to get it right. Even perfect panels won't change that.
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Well, at least our Mopars don't have Bolt-on unibodies and shims holding everything together like adjustments to the front end starters stuff like that I mean what kind of junk is that man?Whatever you have to tell yourself.
The panel fits on these cars were NEVER perfect, not even when new. Body measurements could vary by as much as a 1/4” from the factory. What fits one car might need significant adjustment on the next, and the gaps sure as hell were not all the same. And no reasonable person should ever expect any replacement panel to fit without bodywork, that's not real life. And that's not just Mopars, that's universal. If you need your replacement panel to fit perfectly out of the box you're destined for failure.
The door gap widening an 1/8” requires something moving. The quarter panel just has a flat fold that gets welded directly over the door pillar upright. So, in order for the door gap to change, the door pillar upright had to move. And subframe connectors won't stop the door pillar upright from flexing back an 1/8", or even a 1/4". Not what subframe connectors do. Maybe the panel pulled the door pillar upright, but that happened as part of the installation. Since you said you had the doors in place when you did the quarters, I assume you had the gap right before you started welding. Which means your welding process pulled the panel. Otherwise, the time to address that 1/8" difference was before you welded the quarters on.
If you want your car to have perfect gaps after replacing a substantial amount of structural sheet metal, it will require a ton of work and adjustment to get it right. Even perfect panels won't change that.
View attachment 1716092340
View attachment 1716092343