I appreciate that, Thank you again Roy!! I suppose I could take a photo of my clamps but you'd all be very unimpressed. I have just a handful of basic clamps I make do with.
Like everything else in my shop I should invest in more. Though here is a shot of my tin snips for Steven:

Just your basic left, right and straight snips by Wiss which I bought from the local hardware store; nothing fancy. BTW: Right and left does designate which hand you use to hold them in. It means the curved sweep they will cut in or also the direction you can come at the work in from the same vantage point. (hope that made sense) They have lasted over 8 years of pretty regular use. The pivot bolt eventually works loose so they begin to chew instead of cut. You can retighten but they go loose and back to chewing within a few snips.
A tack weld on the nut solves that problem. The "curl" of metal you see is the excess rolling off the snips shoulder. Phil had shared a link a while ago on these snips in action and I believe he even took a class on using them?? Anyway,the grey shears are Sears craftsman and I use those for long straight cuts. They are wonderful, about 10 years old with their original blades and will still cut through 20 and even 18 gauge very cleanly. If I can't get it with these then its a cutting wheel.
Justin
Like everything else in my shop I should invest in more. Though here is a shot of my tin snips for Steven:Just your basic left, right and straight snips by Wiss which I bought from the local hardware store; nothing fancy. BTW: Right and left does designate which hand you use to hold them in. It means the curved sweep they will cut in or also the direction you can come at the work in from the same vantage point. (hope that made sense) They have lasted over 8 years of pretty regular use. The pivot bolt eventually works loose so they begin to chew instead of cut. You can retighten but they go loose and back to chewing within a few snips.
A tack weld on the nut solves that problem. The "curl" of metal you see is the excess rolling off the snips shoulder. Phil had shared a link a while ago on these snips in action and I believe he even took a class on using them?? Anyway,the grey shears are Sears craftsman and I use those for long straight cuts. They are wonderful, about 10 years old with their original blades and will still cut through 20 and even 18 gauge very cleanly. If I can't get it with these then its a cutting wheel.Justin
yes, with all the constant drama it does seem like an old soap opera.
Thanks again!
Once I reset the fender brace to draw the fender in closer to match the other side it threw everything off. By pulling to top out to preserve my decklid gap the fender "stood up" steeply and seemed to cascade over the lower corner. I absolutely hated the way it looked and it no longer matched the other side! After many changes and fine adjustments I finally got the shape of the fender to hang like I wanted all the while keeping that lower in corner in closer to the frame as to match the left side.
No choice, I'll be relief cutting this area as well before its all over.
If need be I can tweak it as I attach it to the striker but if this shape holds through the rest of the welding it won't need much.
I warned you, its a very unimpressive collection but I manage to get by.
You can never have enough!
I just spent some enjoyable minutes looking at your great photo's.
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