Damn this looks like a fun project.
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Empyres ohtwo!
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My good friend Justin came over today and brought his sweet '85 RHD Trueno along with a shweeeet sticker. He helped me knock out the foglight wiring (still need to clean it up a bit, pictures shown are from how the PO wired it) which you can see hanging down super low and wrapped around suspension parts and came up with some ideas for the next few projects. Started taking the wiring harness out, realized how much was involved with that and said NOOOPPEEE ahahaha. The end is a lil teaser of whats to come (;
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Originally posted by Simply Classy View PostQuite a project car you got there, nice to see another 02 being restored. I'll be keeping my eye on this!
Any thoughts about what you're going to do for an engine? Keeping it or switching it up?
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Where can I get this sticker?
Also love the build so far
*EDIT*
never mind about the sticker I found where to get it
http://www.redbubble.com/people/todd...n-do?p=sticker
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No way am I gunna pay for a patch panel, so I started my first attempts at fabrication lol. Definitely came out better than i expected, but still tons of work. The tunnel is at a funky angle so next step is to pull that even, and weld everything in! Getting closer and closer!
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Just a tip for the floor pan repair, the bigger the gap you have between the metal, the harder it's going to be to weld it. Ideally, you want the size of the gap to be the same as the thickness of the metal you're welding together. Since sheet metal is so thin, and penetrates so easily, you would want virtually no gap between the original floor pan and the new patch panel. Based on the photo above, you're going to have a really hard time filling all that gap on the far end (looks to be over 1/4" of gap between metals). Weld in quick bursts and move around a lot to distribute the heat evenly so you're not letting the metal warp too much.
It might also be easier to just cut a larger piece to patch the whole floorboard right there. The piece you have cut is way too small and you're going to have a harder time filling the remainder of the floor as opposed to just welding in the correct size on the first go. You will have to weld way more if you do it in separate sections like that too. Just my input, good luck.Last edited by CubbyChowder; 05-02-2014, 10:55 PM.
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Originally posted by CubbyChowder View PostJust a tip for the floor pan repair, the bigger the gap you have between the metal, the harder it's going to be to weld it. Ideally, you want the size of the gap to be the same as the thickness of the metal you're welding together. Since sheet metal is so thin, and penetrates so easily, you would want virtually no gap between the original floor pan and the new patch panel. Based on the photo above, you're going to have a really hard time filling all that gap on the far end (looks to be over 1/4" of gap between metals). Weld in quick bursts and move around a lot to distribute the heat evenly so you're not letting the metal warp too much.
It might also be easier to just cut a larger piece to patch the whole floorboard right there. The piece you have cut is way too small and you're going to have a harder time filling the remainder of the floor as opposed to just welding in the correct size on the first go. You will have to weld way more if you do it in separate sections like that too. Just my input, good luck.
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Originally posted by Empyre View PostI was always taught that you want a quarter of the thickness of the metal as the gap between the two, funny enough, right after I posted this i whent and bought a 24x12" piece so i could fill it in with two pieces rather than three. I know everything is REALLY rough right now, but I'm just posting as I go, next step is cleaning everything up and showing that i know what im doing
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Originally posted by CubbyChowder View PostI hope I'm not coming off like I think you don't know what you're doing, that's not my intention. Just trying to offer some input to help save you some headaches, because I've been there myself. I'm sure you'll do a good job with it.
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