Justin,
Experience told you to keep putting it together and then taking it apart to tweak it to get where you needed it. I guess its so easy to think that looks more or less right and start welding up. What an exercise in patience!! Tell me, it seems the panels from Trevor are working out so much better than the cowl ones Trevor was not involved with!!
Your comment to Mark was really correct regarding colour when using the oxy-acetylene torch. Once that orange colour comes up the sheet steel goes easily wherever you need it. I found the forming in the end so good to blend to the existing. But the panel needs to be securely tacked around the form before, that last area that needs to be formed by heat and blended to the existing surface.
I suppose really the proper way to repair is the way you do it Justin, the welds can be dressed so the repair is hard to spot. My way 30 or 40 years ago worked, but often there was overlap onto strong existing sheet steel. That overlap although strong showed in the finish work. I did depress the overlap on occasion and filled. But its then a strong bodge that passed maybe 38 government tests over these past years by the man with his special tools to find the rust holes.
Now would you believe in the UK any car built before 1960 does now not need a yearly MOT ( Ministry test ) I just don't understand that
decision.
Roy
Experience told you to keep putting it together and then taking it apart to tweak it to get where you needed it. I guess its so easy to think that looks more or less right and start welding up. What an exercise in patience!! Tell me, it seems the panels from Trevor are working out so much better than the cowl ones Trevor was not involved with!!
Your comment to Mark was really correct regarding colour when using the oxy-acetylene torch. Once that orange colour comes up the sheet steel goes easily wherever you need it. I found the forming in the end so good to blend to the existing. But the panel needs to be securely tacked around the form before, that last area that needs to be formed by heat and blended to the existing surface.
I suppose really the proper way to repair is the way you do it Justin, the welds can be dressed so the repair is hard to spot. My way 30 or 40 years ago worked, but often there was overlap onto strong existing sheet steel. That overlap although strong showed in the finish work. I did depress the overlap on occasion and filled. But its then a strong bodge that passed maybe 38 government tests over these past years by the man with his special tools to find the rust holes.
Now would you believe in the UK any car built before 1960 does now not need a yearly MOT ( Ministry test ) I just don't understand that
decision.
Roy
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