Must of been the same guy who put in that trunk floor we pulled out of that Regal. Spot welds for days.Today I removed the rusted out rear window to trunk panel. I don't know whose job it was to spot weld this thing in place, but they must've been going for employee of the month. There were spot welds everywhere
I just want to be a little more cognizant of it. I don't want to be revisiting a rust issue down the road but I'm not going to obsess over perfection.Hard to know when to say when.
Not sure how well you can see it, but there is about 12 spot welds in this ~6 inch section.Must of been the same guy who put in that trunk floor we pulled out of that Regal. Spot welds for days.
That's probably one of the few areas I'm not as big a fan of their type products.View attachment 217081
I'm generally not a huge fan of POR-15 type products, but this seems like an ideal application for it (or their POR Patch product) and I really want to avoid going down a rabbit hole of sheet metal replacement. Of course if I start poking and it gets any worse, I'm gonna have to weld some metal in.
Maybe if it was a Chevelle there might of only been 3.Not sure how well you can see it, but there is about 12 spot welds in this ~6 inch section.
Spent the better part of a decade trying to get the Throttle body version of FI-TEch FI system to cooperate. Finally got thaaa-t close to sorting it out and the TPI caffed. I can a replacement; they are offered but elected to yard out the entire system and went back to Carb; specifically the AVS. Like night and day. The AVS was totally responsive right out of the box and I haven't touched anything on it except to reroute the fuel delivery circuit be exchanging the stock item for a 90 degree banjo and bolt that I could clock better. The only additional part required was a short air horn spacer to get the air cleaner to clear the delivery tube for the t-mission stick.I dunno, I've seen a lot of guys get crappy support from holley, and, general observation on these 'fi kits' from most anyone is they don't seem to be keeping up with quality replacement parts, once enough years go by the answer is 'upgrade to our newer model' .... and secretly I think their 'tech support' often isn't a car guy or someone who has ever worked on a car, but, instead it's someone who clicks through computer screens of troubleshooting prompts just reading off what they see.
I put a mask on as soon as I realized it was lead. I was aware they used lead on the pillars but didn't know these were leaded. I didn't wear gloves, but I don't make a habit of licking my fingers.About that panel, yeah it sure seems😀 like someone got a little OCD with the installation at one point or another, but the lead is old school for sure. Hope you were wearing gloves and a breather mask when you ground it out; the new fillers are pretty much "lead" in name only but back before Cali Prop 65 became a household word, metal filler was almost all lead and the material of choice for the customizers and rodders.
Nick
Skylark specific stuff is tough but anything that interchanges with Chevelle is easy to find. Most inner structures, firewall, core support, and roof are all the same as the other A Body siblings.Are the body panels easily sourced for replacements? Early A bodies, especially BOP's don't get nearly the support 68-72 stuff does.
When working with the dust, the cleanup, or anywhere else that crops up? Just an FYI, lead is a tricky sucker and absorbs through the skin, not just the mouth.I put a mask on as soon as I realized it was lead. I was aware they used lead on the pillars but didn't know these were leaded. I didn't wear gloves, but I don't make a habit of licking my fingers.
GBodyForum is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. Amazon, the Amazon logo, AmazonSupply, and the AmazonSupply logo are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates.