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Old 04-19-2012, 10:03 PM   #1
foamypirate
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Calling anyone who has shaved their cab seam (and even those that haven't)!

How the heck do you get the seam sealer out? I can't get a wire wheel in there, and it's pretty solid stuff. I tried aircraft stripper, which seems to soften about 0.01mm at a time. At the moment, I've resorted to scraping it out with a screwdriver, very, very, very slowly, but this won't get all of it out. The stuff also gasses out when you weld over it (I tried a test spot weld just out of curiosity). It just bubbles the weld out while it's still soft and cooling...

Tips and suggestion are very much needed (and appreciated)! Is there some neat tool I'm missing?
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Old 04-20-2012, 07:54 AM   #2
RandyP
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Re: Calling anyone who has shaved their cab seam (and even those that haven't)!

3m 07471, we call it a crud cutting disc, is basically a course scotch bright made to go on the end of a high speed rotary tool. Then we used 3m 08116 panel bonding adhesive to fill the seam. Let that dry, smooth, put a skim coat of mud on it and block it out smooth.
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Old 04-20-2012, 08:39 AM   #3
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Re: Calling anyone who has shaved their cab seam (and even those that haven't)!

my truck just went throught the body shop. they have a sanding disk like 40 grit its small like 2" and it works on their air sander.. they use that to scrape all that junk out.
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Old 04-20-2012, 09:45 AM   #4
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Re: Calling anyone who has shaved their cab seam (and even those that haven't)!

Quote:
Originally Posted by RandyP View Post
3m 07471, we call it a crud cutting disc, is basically a course scotch bright made to go on the end of a high speed rotary tool. Then we used 3m 08116 panel bonding adhesive to fill the seam. Let that dry, smooth, put a skim coat of mud on it and block it out smooth.
I did mine just like this. The only difference I did was to put tape over the glue while it is drying, to keep it from running.
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Old 04-20-2012, 09:58 AM   #5
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Re: Calling anyone who has shaved their cab seam (and even those that haven't)!

WORD OF WARNING ABOUT PUTTING MUD IN THIS SEAM>>>

Most of the time (95%) this seam is not fully welded from the factory. For those of you who don't know, this IS a welded seam, with just seam sealer on the outside to fill the gap. The INSIDE has the spot welds where the 2 pieces are welded together, the roof skin and backl panel. The reason you can't see this seam from the inside is the inside roof skin is installed AFTER the seam is welded. The seam that runs accross the back of the truck is almost never completely welded. Just last year I did a roof skin swap from a 79 to an 87 truck. NEITHER seam was completely welded!!! BTW since this seam is hidden once the inside roof skin was installed, we used Panel Bond on the seam with great results.

With that being said, the first time you 'flex' the cab (like going through a ditch) and have 'mud' in that seam, it will crack or even fall out. If you want to fill that seam, get all the seam sealer out, then spot weld the gap. Then you can grind and fill as needed.
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Old 04-20-2012, 12:12 PM   #6
foamypirate
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Re: Calling anyone who has shaved their cab seam (and even those that haven't)!

Thanks for the input guys! Since I plan on welding the seam, it sounds like a small disc and some careful grinding are the way to go.
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Old 04-20-2012, 11:19 PM   #7
Gordonr1973
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Re: Calling anyone who has shaved their cab seam (and even those that haven't)!

I cleaned it out as best I could then spot welded it.

Hoping it holds up well over time....
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