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09-07-2013, 08:19 PM | #26 |
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Loganville, GA
Posts: 115
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Re: What are these holes in my Suburban door for?
RoyL, I have the same problem on my driver side door. Someone bondo'd the original holes and mounted a car mirror farther back. The good new is that the original holes are still visible through the finish, so I hope that I can use a small drill bit to drill through the bondo and then run a tap through the holes to clean them out. The passenger side has never had a mirror mounted, but does have the backing plate. I think I will try your center punch trick on that side since I have a small spring loaded center punch. Of course then I have to fill the car mirror holes...
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09-08-2013, 08:46 AM | #27 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: HSV, AL
Posts: 292
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Re: What are these holes in my Suburban door for?
Quote:
I used a 5" center punch, would be better to use a shorter one, you need long skinny arms to reach the 2 closest backing plate holes, unless you have the glass out...
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1965 Suburban Waiting on Time and Money |
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09-11-2013, 06:21 AM | #28 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: HSV, AL
Posts: 292
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Re: What are these holes in my Suburban door for?
Added diagram. This will get you close (I measured 3 different doors and none were the same, so I show the range). The door edge and body line are not straight, so hard to get good measurements … is best to locate holes from the mirror backing plate inside the door (if your truck has one).
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1965 Suburban Waiting on Time and Money Last edited by RoyL; 09-11-2013 at 06:26 AM. Reason: linky no worky |
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1962, 4x4, burbluv, chevrolet, suburban |
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