Adamis, you’re headed down that same deep expensive rabbit hole that you have with so many things involving your truck and camper.
First blush what you’re proposing , whether it’s right or not is throwing a lot of good money after bad.
Second, same as first.
I can’t speak to the actual construction of the glass shell like others can, but I can say, if major repair of something that virtually no one does involves a boat repair shop, you’re looking at $1000s.
Didn’t you just have the belly off last week? That’s your best access. Cutting the front shell off and going at it from the outside in sounds expensive and wrong.
But you’re one of those fellers who will ask a question and then do what you want to regardless of the responses, so just dig in and let us all know how it goes.
In my 10years on this forum, I’ve never heard of this issue or anyone doing structural repairs to a BF TC. So it’s unlikely you’ll have any first hand knowledge pop up.
Yes you can twist a TC up while sitting on jacks. But I’m failing to se how a little flex in the front wall affects the door in back. You may have bigger issues, however you’re also determined that it’s never leaving the truck so if it works 99% of the time, why fork with it?
Pull the jacks off of it like you plan to and solve your door problem for free. (Also a bad idea but in your way of thinking you’d kill 2 birds with one stone)
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold