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Saturday, 8 August 2015

Spine plate repair section

A little repair patch that I fabricated:



Liberally sprayed the inside of the flanges with some zinc rich weld through primer:


The piece offered up and clamped in place ready for welding:


Started with a few spaced out tack welds and then continued to fill the spaces in-between until it was a solid weld:


Welds ground down and dressed with a quick lick of primer just to keep things fresh. Not bad if I do say so myself:


Wednesday, 5 August 2015

Napoleon fix-up (part 3)

I thought that repairing the passengers side of the Naps Hat would be a walk in the park. Well, that turned out not to be true! Here’s a quick review up to the point of the imploding headache...

This side of the Naps Hat was in a better condition than the driver’s side and so more original steel could be retained. With this in mind, I choose to make my cut just before the end tip starts to angle upwards and marked it up:


I cut out the pitted metal from one of the flanges (the other was solid so could be left):



I measured up and cut the corresponding section from the repair section and got everything trimmed flush. At this point I was thinking that everything was coming together perfectly and that I could have this done in no time:



However, as soon as I placed the repair piece onto the jig and moved it flush against the original steel my heart sank when it became apparent that there was a height difference of about 1.5mm:


I sanded the bottom of the repair section as there was a slight lip around the perimeter that was standing proud, but the overall difference this made was minimal. Looking at the cross-section of the repair section it was apparent that things were rather misshapen and I hoped that some bashing and manipulation I would be able to lower the profile and true-up the cross section. Two birds with one stone! Sadly, this just ended up making things worse. At this point the width was out by about 3mm and there was a visible taper when viewed from above! Damn these Klokker-shite aftermarket panels! Feeling deflated and frustrated I decided to sleep on the problem. With a rested mind and fresh perspective my solution was to add a little bridging section to replace the now distorted area. I trimmed the repro piece even shorter, to eliminate the dodgy section:


Then clamped it in place on the jig and made my measurements for the missing bridge section:


I bent this into shape using my former:


Here is the piece aligned against the jig with the first few welds in place. I think you can tell where I am going with this:


Ground and dressed:


With everything layed out on the jig, things were looking promising:


All welded in and the welds ground flush:


As with the drivers side, the last thing to do was to add a flange. I had to do this in two sections as my former was not quite long enough:  




Used my self devised gaffer tape and spray paint method to mark up the flanges and trimmed them to size: 



On a positive note, there was a silver lining to all this faffing. Because this repair procedure omitted the 3rd hole on the Klokker-shite piece, I was able to drill a factory correct 8mm hole in the correct position. Nobody will ever see it, but it makes me feel good to know that it is there:



For symmetry's sake, I patched up the 3rd hole on the drivers side and also added the factory correct 8mm hole:  




I am delighted to announce that this concludes the Napoleon's Hat saga. Looking good as new: