Wills250psd wrote:
You are one of if not the best metal fabricaters I ever seen and I have seen alot. I use to run a huge auto body shop and we had a guy from greece who was also very good with metal. Keep up the good work. Will
Thanks for that, nice confidence booster.
December update
Merry Xmas everyone. I've been quite busy the past couple of weeks in the garage. Quite a bit of progress but not as much as i wanted (as usual). Now that the roof is done, the drivers side is done and the rear is done it leaves me with the front and passenger side to do.
To give myself a break from repeating myself a lot i decided to do the front cab section. I think i had kinda started on it in the last update with this section.
So i had to make this piece once cut out, nice straight forward repair.
Used the old as a template and cut it out.
Welded in place.
Now the next panel was a bit trickier, this piece goes behind what i just welded in. Its about 10" long and one edge is flat then curves round and the other has 4 different fold in it. It took me a bit of time to get this right. Its probably the most complicated panel ive made from one piece.
Getting there, I know it doesn't look like much but there's also a slight dip that is hard to see, so it curves as well as being folded. I've found when making panels that at points it looks nothing like what your trying to create, its not until the end that it all comes together.
More perseverance
And done!
Before welding it in i thought it would be wise to do the little section that sits at the rear of the door. This section was actually good to make, it looks complicated but in the end it wasn't.
Cut it out for sizes and to use as a template.
After thinking about it for a while i thought it would be best to split it into 2 sections. Cutting the curved section out first and folding it.
Then using the shrinker/strecher i put a slight curve in it. Then the top piece was cut out and tapped with a hammer to give it a little flange.
Then weld the 2 to make 1. I liked making this, was quick to do and is big part of the door frame.
I welded both panels in place at this point too.
Continuing along from those i had to repair this piece.
cut it out. make a new piece and weld it in.
I was also left a little piece to patch here..
couple of folds in the patch piece.
Little tip, if the panel is too small to hold properly you can tack another longer piece of metal, in my case an Arc rod, and use that to hold it place.
Welded up and cleaned a little. I asked the wife for a Dremel for Xmas so i can get into the corners and edges better.
And a few other holes go the same treatment underneath so it is all sealed now, sweet.
Next up is the box section at the front.
Here it is the day i bought the van. I remember looking at this at first and not really knowing how i would fix it and hopefully it would all come clear when it came to it. But no, i was still a bit stumped. Particularly because the other side was the same and i never really had enough there to get dimensions from. I managed to get a hold of my mate who is also restoring a Thames, i went round to his to get some photos and sizes which helped a lot, so thanks George!
Here it is from the inside
And out
I drilled the spot welds out and removed the inner section.
Yeah.......great.
The post and front corner of the van are also needing replaced. I found a quality repair someone had made earlier though.
Oh wait, did i say quality, i meant crap. The old mesh and fiberglass technique.
Something that i still never knew was how it should all join up inside. Obviously i couldn't take my friends Thames apart to find out so this piece will be put together in the best way i can think. There's about 5 panels that all get layered here. Bit of a shame as ive tried to keep everything as original as i can with the restoration but i cant do anything else here.
I removed the front section as well
First thing to do is weld a new strip in here so i have something decent to weld to.
Then i had a little bit at the back to patch.
Back to the inner piece *sigh*
Made a few measurements (that were wrong, more on that later,bugger) and cut it out.
Folded it over , the curved lip was a bit of a pain, i used a pair of pliers and folded it little by little and used a hammer to neaten it.
Then the rear section was bent and tacked in.
The rear section would stretch too much so i had to cut slits in it.
tacked into position.
I never realized at this point but it is actually about 30mm too tall. You see at the bottom the lip is supposed to be in line with the front valance. I still hadn't noticed this so i carried on.
Before starting on the front cover i had to cut a few other pieces out to replace first. The inner post was rotting at the bottom so i had to gain access to that. Drilled out a few spot welds and cut some bits out.
post out.
valance corner off.
Heres the front off to repair. The main section was rotten but the top and lip were OK, so i decided to make a new main section and join it to the original.
The piece i need to make has channel in it for the door rubber to sit in. I remember seeing a forum that had some guys from Vietnam or Thailand, something like that, repairing VW vans and the guy showed an example of how he created these channels with hand tools so i thought id do the same.
I marked the channel on a bit of sheet then clamped the edge of it to a piece of 50mm angle.
Then i got an old chisel and made it blunt with the grinder. Then tapped it against the angle so it would create a little dip and carried along to the end.
After a little while i got a channel done, nice one!
Then i tapped out a curve and a few other details.
Welded the new to old and gave it a tidy up.
Placed into position for welding later.
Here is the door post. I don't know how this should look at the bottom so its a bit made up.
Cut the rotten out.
New piece tacked to old
A few more pieces and weld it up.
Then weld the post to the front. Now, this is when i realized the other section was too tall. I think where i went wrong was that i deliberately made the inner and outer piece a bit longer so i can cut them back to size later. But i went wrong somewhere and made the inner piece to have the lip too far down. I could just leave it because i don't think anyone will notice, i have tried to tell myself that but ive went this far trying to keep it original that i don't think i will be happy with it ever until i fix it. So i shall fix it. Its hard to explain by typing down but i will show what i mean in a future update once its been done.
As i was a bit few up with how the corner was going i thought id complete the rear as that is in the right place.
I cut the little piece i had left off and put another channel into a peice of sheet
Marked the rest, cut it out, drilled some spot weld holes and bent the flange up.
Put in place.
To complete it i made the little piece above the wheel arch.
Then tidied it up. I got my Dremel by this point (thanks wife) but i never had any cutting discs. I want to put the groves back into the areas that i had to weld to make it look more OEM.
Thats all for this time. I'm starting to realize that there's not really a huge amount of main bodywork left to do then i get to start on the mechanicals. I will do the doors and valance when im stuck with the mechanicals or after, just to give me a break from metalwork all the time.
I should also have some good news that should become clearer in a couple of months or so, and oh, thanks for whoever voted for me on the retro-rides 'best build thread of 2012' , means a lot.