1958 MGA Coupe

thks guys and yes we are into rebirthing old cars.... just call me FrankenBob....

the front end needs a little bit of massaging and inorder for me to have a complete picture I ground out the thin layer of bondo that was added from a previous repair.

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not sure if you can see but it almost likes like the area was brazed at one time

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a small tear

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some more bondo

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all in all its in really good shape and will require just a small amount of TLC

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ya know, I used to have a neighbor with a yard like the one on the left.... it was strange, we both did the same lawn care, yet for some reason (he was downhill of me) his yard looked like crap and mine always looked awesome. :D .... it was really strange, what is even weirder, once I moved his yard became green and lush.... totally weird, huh?

For some reason, this picture reminds me of those days
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SBG, that's funny as hell, all I have to DO is look at grass and it dies.....

but I know grass grows on alkaline dirt, and trees pour out acid,.....

around here, trees WIN.....oaks/pines galore....

:surrender::surrender:
 
zoysia on the left and fescue on the right.... i reseed each fall and spring in this area and i am always amazed that anything grows in this area. its gets hard use. i would think it should look more like an over used dirt play ground
 
zoysia on the left and fescue on the right.... i reseed each fall and spring in this area and i am always amazed that anything grows in this area. its gets hard use. i would think it should look more like an over used dirt play ground

*sigh* and my joke lands with a resounding thud after being winged by reality
 
I think the best you can do is to try and minimize the skim coat and make it as smooth as possible by using a dolly and hammmer

some bites of the elphant

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hard to see but this is the the correct dimension and pretty flat

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use templates for judging correctness

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cut out the bent piece and will replace it with a butt seamed flat piece

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I have been asked how do I weld thin metals together with out getting burn through on the rusty piece so I paid attention to my techniques on this....the repair panel is 20ga and the old radiator valance is very thin

so I am using my mig welder like a tig and oxy actelyene set up.....the trick is to create a puddle of molten metal and then tease it and move it around with the feeding Mig wire going from side to side to bridge any gaps. so I use this technique as soon as it starts to get a burn through. if you look at this you can see where there are nice clean welds and then you see some piles of metal that I created to bridge gaps. Metal doesnt care how it gets created and grinding stuff down makes it all smooth again...

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When I'm really fighting to weld light pieces together, I use my mig and also everdur filler rod. Nice thing about everdur is it cools the weld - of course, then you have the bronze color in the weld....
 
i have never used that but i have used TIG welding rod.

a couple more bites of the elephant in the snowy weather

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use a backing plate of copper and lots of small welds this is very very thin.....MIG with .025 wire set to lowest setting and feed of 3.5

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all ground down , use a flash light on the back sode to make sure there are no small holes

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everdur is also know as silicone bronze .... some people call it siliconing by weld

I have some of that to fill some spots on a part using TIG, Seen it on MuscleCar on Spike a couple years ago

I grew up working in my dad's metal-fab shop, we used silicone bronze to fuse galv. coated steel (knocks down the splatter) when we TIG'd it together. A word of caution, it is not a strong way of welding....

It was recently where desperation (welding a rusty roof on a MOPAR) gave me the thought to use it with my mig.... worked well, best looking MOPAR in the scrap yard (I'm serious about the scrap yard, tough call on best looking :devil:)
 
the steel filler rod always seems to work for me and since its steel the end result is pretty strong. it just dissolves in the pool of molten metal. i cant recall actually ever brazing anything...other then maybe a radiator

this project should give every body hope for their cars....I think the key is to have honest expectations of what the end product is going to look like....you know "its hard to make a silk purse out of a sows ear". I am pretty sure I am going to make this into a period style vintage racer that way the battle scars will look right in line...I dont get too wound up in having everything just the way it came from the factory....that I can tell you drives some Corvette guys nuts, so to the purists I will apologize in advance.

I only have pictures of half of the nose repair areas I must have gotten too busy and forgot to take pictures of the other side

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so out comes the MIG .025 wire and settings A and B wire feed 3 to 4.25

heres the rough welding

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before it gets ground down

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two hours tonight peeling back the layer of steel that was spot welded to the inner fender. I used a grinder to grind the spot welds and then peeled the layer off like opening a can.

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i used the channel locks to coil up the layer i was removing

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here you can see the grinds on the spot welds, all you have to do is hit the metal with the grinder and indentation will show you where the spot weld is.

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and a finished side

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two finished sides

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another 2 hrs of work

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same process grind the metal and the spot weld divet indentation shows up and then grind and peel away

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again I take this seriously

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in case any body ever wanted to see some unusual shots

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I was thinking about how I am going to make the splice work and I came up with this idea.

I cut the inner frame support from the bonnet

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then trimmed it

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slipped it inside the support and made it two

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and did a test fit

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one more hour to fix the last piece of rust on the front shroud

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and the piece from the donor inner fender

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I must be unclear on the concept here..... you cut a rusty, dented, greasy piece of metal off the fender; then welded a red, rusty, dented, greasy piece of metal in its place? :rofl:




:thumbs:
 
4 hrs today ....I really took my time to make sure i didnt screw up

heres how you can make lines that are transferrable

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you can get the idea of how the splice will work

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really taking my time so i dont have an accidental over cut

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slowly you can see the gap getting smaller

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so heres the big gap that needs to be made smaller
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getting close and i used a 1/4" rod to transfer the cut line

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so i used those alinging pieces inside the bonnet frame support and you can see the gap getting closer

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at this point both sides are really close
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so to make the final cut its all clamped in and i very slowly use the cut off wheel and make a cut right in the middle of splice line

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close to the final splice the rest of the trimming will be done with a hand file
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final gaps

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and i need to tweak this alittle

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here i am using copper in between my temp splice and the two sections of the bonnet so i can weld the outer drip rail

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all tacked in place and time to stop, everything went very well so some times you need to know when to stop

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