- Joined
- Jan 7, 2015
- Messages
- 8,032
- Reaction score
- 530
- Location
- Western North Carolina
- My Car
- Multiple Mustangs!
I know some of you guys are deep into body repair and panel replacement. When I was working in the automotive stamping business we supplied several different Ford plants. Ford would allow the repair of small fractures, cracks or even splits in their inner panels. We had a rework area that this was carried out in and I believe they use Henrob 2000 torches. I had that area when the regular operations manager was on vacation. They are very compact compared to a regular torch which is tiring to use. You had a kit with various tips you could use. We had a woman that did the repairs and the torch gets the area to weld hot very fast and did not warp the panel and once you hit with a sander you could not see the repair.
Does anyone on the forum have one and can anyone suggest a good place to get one? They are expensive compared to the conventional oxy, acetylene torches but so much easier to use. Was fast and very little heat into the part. I know Ford is the one that told us what torch to use.
One of the parts they did lots of repairs on was for the Model 13 Ford Ranger extended cab. We made the inside back reinforcement and it had an area that was prone to splits.
I know one of the area restoration shops here will not let their guys use electric welder on repair only oxy acetylene. They do very expensive sometimes in the millions cars. They can make the welds look just like spot welds with a torch and also skin panel patches with no filler. It is owned and ran by a British guy for get the name of the shop right now.
Anyway any info would be appreciated been searching the net and they are expensive. I bought a Smiths when I was 17 and still have but very bulky and heavy and tiring to use. Attached a couple pics.
Does anyone on the forum have one and can anyone suggest a good place to get one? They are expensive compared to the conventional oxy, acetylene torches but so much easier to use. Was fast and very little heat into the part. I know Ford is the one that told us what torch to use.
One of the parts they did lots of repairs on was for the Model 13 Ford Ranger extended cab. We made the inside back reinforcement and it had an area that was prone to splits.
I know one of the area restoration shops here will not let their guys use electric welder on repair only oxy acetylene. They do very expensive sometimes in the millions cars. They can make the welds look just like spot welds with a torch and also skin panel patches with no filler. It is owned and ran by a British guy for get the name of the shop right now.
Anyway any info would be appreciated been searching the net and they are expensive. I bought a Smiths when I was 17 and still have but very bulky and heavy and tiring to use. Attached a couple pics.