You'll be fine. Unless you're planning to DD this thing in salt, this patch will likely outlive you. Not everything requires total replacement.
Might need some hammers & spoons to get that finished shape needed. Always good to have a set of hammers & spoons on hand. Even better to have a leather bag to hammer on.I went and picked up the shrinker/stretcher set from HF this morning. It works well. I did a few practice pieces to get the hang of it. After which I got my small cutoff corner and started putting some more curve in it. Not sure how well I did. I used a template, but the fitment still isn't great. The lip radius is perfect, but now the rest of the piece is off. The area with the arrow needs to be concave, it's currently convexed.
View attachment 239969
I'm still completely inexperienced with these tools so I'm guessing this is just a result of that as well as the piece not being the greatest to begin with. Still, I was happy with the tools and I'll definitely be able to use them. Before these pieces stacked completely flat, you can see how much radius it actually needed.
View attachment 239968
I won't really know until I get the outer radius welded in, but it might be easier to just use the one, large lower quarter patch as opposed to doing the corner separately. Less body lines to match up and a bigger area to spread those lines over. The lower rear panel wasn't too bad of a fit to begin with.
And in thinking about attaching the radius patch last night, the thought occurred to me to use panel bonding adhesive on the lip. The stuff is every bit as strong as weld, should be a much better corrosion inhibitor than weld thru primer, and a lot easier to do than drilling and plug welding the whole lip. It'll probably look better as well.
Yep. Weld the outside, inside lip is glued.So weld the outside glue the inside? I would have thought spot welds on the inside?
Yep. Weld the outside, inside lip is glued.
I obviously don't have a factory style resistance welder, so if I were to weld the lip, I'd have to drill holes every 2 inches or so, plug weld them and grind the welds down. The panel bond is a lot easier. No drilling, no welding and the glue itself seals and prevents rust from forming between the panels.
It's a good product. It's great for lapping patch panels as it will seal between the panels so that no moisture or dirt can get between them and cause rot. If you are doing it that way, you want to completely cover the overlapped areas, don't just gun out a bead or it won't seal and won't be as strong. I have to look and see if I have pictures of any patch panels that I did that way.OK so my mind was in the right place, this is just a workaround. May have to steal this step for R&R'ing the Camaro quarter panel as it's not going to be exposed to nasty elements.
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