- Joined
- Nov 7, 2013
- Messages
- 1,632
- Reaction score
- 365
- Location
- Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- My Car
- 1973 Mustang Grande 351C 2V, built on the very last production day (July 6, 1973) for Grande's.
Alrighty, I started my last big panel replacement which is, the battery apron (which includes the tray). The area where the battery sits is pretty rotten with holes and everything that comes with that. Have a look:
More piccies below. One from underneath and one from a piece of reinforcement that strengthens the frame rail:
To get to the apron I removed all accessories and cooling system stuff, this leaves plenty of room to work (if your back is OK ;-) ):
I used a powerfile to sand away the spot welds. This is pretty straightforward just don't go nuts in areas where you want to save material like that piece along the top but also watch out for the reinforcement underneath the tray. That piece is spot welded onto the frame first and the apron is in turn spot welded on to that reinforcement. The reinforcement is not reproduced I believe so proceed with caution!
The result:
When it's loose you get to see the whole crunchy truth. To see how bad it is I gave it a bath in diluted phosphoric acid:
I ran out of time to finish it but it cleaned up pretty OK:
One thing (actually two things) puzzled me while removing the apron. Take a look at this photo of the side of the shock tower:
1 - That bolt the red arrow points at, is that fixed somehow or is it removable? I left it because it wasn't giving way when it met my friend hammer...
2- The green arrow points at a thick metal plate that sits between the tower and that other thing with the rubber block on it. There is another one on the other side. Why? What is it for?
Thanks! Till next time
More piccies below. One from underneath and one from a piece of reinforcement that strengthens the frame rail:
To get to the apron I removed all accessories and cooling system stuff, this leaves plenty of room to work (if your back is OK ;-) ):
I used a powerfile to sand away the spot welds. This is pretty straightforward just don't go nuts in areas where you want to save material like that piece along the top but also watch out for the reinforcement underneath the tray. That piece is spot welded onto the frame first and the apron is in turn spot welded on to that reinforcement. The reinforcement is not reproduced I believe so proceed with caution!
The result:
When it's loose you get to see the whole crunchy truth. To see how bad it is I gave it a bath in diluted phosphoric acid:
I ran out of time to finish it but it cleaned up pretty OK:
One thing (actually two things) puzzled me while removing the apron. Take a look at this photo of the side of the shock tower:
1 - That bolt the red arrow points at, is that fixed somehow or is it removable? I left it because it wasn't giving way when it met my friend hammer...
2- The green arrow points at a thick metal plate that sits between the tower and that other thing with the rubber block on it. There is another one on the other side. Why? What is it for?
Thanks! Till next time