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Old 10-07-2005, 10:36 PM   #1
69gmconfire
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Cool new to the forum, help with sheet metal

Hello everyone! Im new to the forum and I have a 69 gmc truck that I am trying to restore. and as I get into the project I find that this is a really big thing I am taking on lol. well my question is, I bought some new floor patch paneles from "classicheartbeat" and I went to line them up in my truck tonight and they don't fit vary well. it is looking like I will have to do a lot of bending and cutting to make them fit. what I was woundering is if this is a common issue? and if it is, dose anyone have any advice that will make this a little easyer? after i get the paneles in place, I plan on using some sealent and riveting them down to the floor. then i am gonna get some carpet later. I don't really have a whole lot of metal working tools, so I am gonna have to get creative with this. any help is welcomed! thank you!

justin,
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Old 10-07-2005, 10:49 PM   #2
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All I can say is this: Patch panels generally don't fit perfectly. Goodmark here in GA sells replacement panels that are supposed to be GM certified or something and I was looking at a classic trucks magazine recently where they show their panel, a stock panel and a competitor's panel for a trunk and you can see how closely theirs is to the stock one and how much extra metal they give you to work with. I'll see if I can find it again...scan it, then post.
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Old 10-07-2005, 10:55 PM   #3
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alright thanks man, I will have to just work with what I got then. becuase I already spent a lot, on two new floor patches, and two kick panel patches. so I will just have to make them fit I guess lol. this kinda sucks, if I had known they would be this mutch hassil I would have probably not gotten them. but life is full of lessons! haha. well I will post some pics of my progress later on this month. thanks for the help!
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Old 10-07-2005, 10:59 PM   #4
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too bad you're in washington. i just went to goodmark's website and they will do your rockers for $250 each and entire rear quarters for $650 each. not bad at all.
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Old 10-07-2005, 11:50 PM   #5
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Welcome to the board from South Mississippi. You need to do what I need to do...get a welder and practice, then watch ebfabman's videos and put the patch panels in the right way.
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Old 10-08-2005, 12:13 AM   #6
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I would not pop rivet those floor pans in. Those are safety items and are a structural part of the cab. You and your family could be at risk in the event of an accident. Please have them welded in. You can save yourself a ton of money the way you are doing it now. Line everything up and then take it to a bodyshop and just have them weld in. Tell them you will grind and clean up welds and seam seal and primer areas.
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Old 10-08-2005, 12:14 AM   #7
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Welcome to the board from MN. Dont get discouraged, it can be really easy to. We'll help you through it all.
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Old 10-08-2005, 12:27 AM   #8
72orangepumpkin
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 72CSTC5
I would not pop rivet those floor pans in. Those are safety items and are a structural part of the cab. You and your family could be at risk in the event of an accident. Please have them welded in. You can save yourself a ton of money the way you are doing it now. Line everything up and then take it to a bodyshop and just have them weld in. Tell them you will grind and clean up welds and seam seal and primer areas.

I agree on the "don't pop rivet" I bought a Lincoln welder with the gas attachment for under $500 at Home Depot and rented a bottle of shielding gas from a local auto parts store. You could always turn around and sell the welder when your done or keep it for future use. With a little practice you can do fairly well, I just learned that a grinder is a welders best friend. I also had the same problems with floor pans and cab corners no fitting right. I used parts from "Chevy Duty" and "Goodmark" and neither fit like a glove without cutting and bending, If you havn't already cut out the entire floor panels, consider just cutting out what you need to replace and then cutting the panel to fit This is what I ended up doing on the second side of my truck after major tweaking on the first side, the second turned out much better.
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Old 10-08-2005, 01:22 AM   #9
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alright, so rivets are a bad thing then. well I have a shop right next too my work, I might be able to get them to weld the stuff in cheap. it definetly sounds like thats the route I am going to have to go. thanks everyone for all the help! you saved me from a major headache! I don't know if anyone has had something like this done at a shop yet, anyone know a ball park figure of what I should expect too pay?
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Old 10-08-2005, 01:55 AM   #10
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I did a set of rockers, one inner rocker, one cab corner, "a" and "b" pillars, kick panels, one floor and parts of the floor on the other side for $1000. I primed it with DP90 when I was done. I then hung and adjusted the doors. This was a favor for a friend here in WA but it was quite a bit of work. It was in the summer and nice weather too. Now that it is nasty out and gets dark early it is a bit more of a pain. I don't know how you can just do a rocker. There is always more work to once you take the rocker off and expose whatever else has rusted. Just my $0.02. There is a shop not far from here that had about $2500 in one cab. They did sand and prime the entire cab however.
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Old 10-08-2005, 09:52 AM   #11
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alright, it sounds like I am going at this project all wrong. I think I am going to change my game plan here and start from the outside working my way into the cab. because if i get the cab looking nice without taking care of all the rust issues on the outside of the cab... then it will just start rusting agian in a couple years. so I am gonna start taking body panels off one by one and geting all the rust off of everything. I think that sounds better than wasting my time getting the inside cab looking nice. Am I wrong?
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Old 10-08-2005, 10:49 AM   #12
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Sounds like a good gameplan to me.
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Old 10-08-2005, 11:19 AM   #13
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Welcome for Kentucky.
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Old 10-08-2005, 12:19 PM   #14
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http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s....php3?t=139825

Here's a good thread with a lot of info you might enjoy.
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Old 10-08-2005, 09:47 PM   #15
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Welcome to the board from southern oregon I do not know where in washington you live but if it is close-e-nuf to wes then I am sure you could get him to weld in the pannels for you.. Good luck on your project and keep us posted...
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Old 10-08-2005, 10:28 PM   #16
55chevy
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I did rockers

Got one cut off so far, 27 spot welds along the bottom alone, uncovered A pillar rust and rust/bondo at edge of floor pan, will weld in new mtal and reinforce floors with fiberglass cloth, read a lot of the old posts here, lot of good advice.
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Old 10-09-2005, 12:36 AM   #17
69gmconfire
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man 55chevy your truck is way worse than mine! I thought my rust was bad, you got rust everywhere! how do you even begin to work on that? I feel for you man, working on these things is not easy... here are some pics of what my truck looked like when I got it from my grandpa last month. tomorrow I will try and post recent pics.
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