Page Ten: Serious Surgery
Rusty Rockers - Somewhere There’s Solid Metal
With Alphie belly-up like a dead fish, I can get to her rusticles
easily. Standing up and working at chest
height, it’s heavenly.
First up, Alphie’s ragged rockers. Clearly, Alphie spent some time on salty
roads, that and 60’s auto makers’ rust protection was mostly in name only. Rootes’ anti-corrosion regime was red oxide
primer. Alphie’s undercoating turned
toes up long ago, leaving black mucousy wads here and there on her nethers. Bonehead Wrenching’s anti-corrosion regime is
POR15, great gob that! I might over-coat
it with red oxide primer for authenticity’s sake – we’ll see, that’s a ways
down the lane.
At first glance, the rockers are a shambles of jagged rust,
but with my new perspective, I’m beginning to see how Sunbeam glued these cars
together. “If you can figure out how it
works, you can figure out how to fix it” – at least, that’s what I tell myself.
With new cutting discs in my grinders, I went about
prospecting for solid metal. (I now
understand why shops have racks of different sized grinders loaded with all
manner of discs – switching disks burns a lot of time. I have a 4 ½ inch and a 7 inch grinder, which
helps, but still…) I whittled down the
passenger side, the rustier of the two, then I started poking about on the
frame members where the rockers attach.
More flaky metal! Fortunately,
the rust is localized and not systemic.
So, here’s the run down for cross member repair:
The Front Cross Member: The
rockers have three attachment points: at a front, middle and rear cross member,
for want of a better description. The front
cross member only needed a small patch, about 2X2 inches. It was easy peasy, and it gave me some good
butt welding practice. I recreated two
tabs that serve as the actual welding points for the rocker panel pieces. I attached the tabs using my latest toy, a
120-volt a spot welder from our grand benefactor, Harbor Freight – more on that
below.
Front Cross Member before |
Front Cross Member after |
The Middle Cross Member: The
more I glared at the middle cross member, the worse it got. The middle cross member shoots off from the
main X frame at the center of the “X” and perpendicular to the centerline of
the car, kinda like this: “X—“. It also has a small box frame support that
runs parallel with the centerline that supports the floor pan where the seats
are mounted. It also connects the front
and middle cross members and runs all the way to the bumper attachment points
at the front of the car.
I noticed some flakey metal so I mounted a full-scale assault with double-barreled grinders, a reciprocating saw, an air hammer, chisels, hammers and bloody fingers. After removing a length of malignant metal along the length of the cross member, I could see inside the cross member… Flakey, crusty and paper thin, so more cutting!
With the two sides of the
perpendicular extension of the middle cross member flayed open, I could see
that the end of the parallel cross member was not entirely attached to the
perpendicular piece anymore, BUT I finally found some solid metal.
Parallel
Cross Member: The parallel cross
member needs a new tip and attachment tabs.
The parallel cross member is boxed sheet metal, but I had to saw off a
10.5 cm length of it to find metal solid enough to hold welds.
Box Frame fabbed and spot welded. You may note that one of the tabs is in the wrong place - I figured it out when I started to install it!@%#*& |
Butt-welded to the existing cross member and partially cleaned up. I removed the misplaced tab, but now I see I need one on the opposite side of the other tab... insert your favorite curse word |
OK, the truth - I kept
cutting the cross member at weird angles so that fabbing a new chunk of box
frame that mated up to the existing cross member would have been
problematic. It took about three tries
to get a reasonably square cut. Meaning
the actual bad metal was only about 5 cm long.
It’s sodding hard to make a square cut with a grinder, just saying.
I fabbed up an 11 cm chunk of box frame using my spanking
new spot welder. The extra 5 mm gave me
some leeway to adjust the mating edges to get a good butt weld. It turned out mint, if I say so myself. Check out the pic.
Perpendicular Cross Member: This cross member (the one at the center of the X frame) is an upside-down serif U shaped box with a piece of sheet metal welded to flanges like the serifs on the U. The bottom sheet metal piece has weight reducing holes in it, which present a fabrication “opportunity”. I haven’t taken that on yet.
One vertical side of the U will need a patch about a foot long, but it will be an easy fabrication with only a flange on the bottom edge where the sheet metal bottom attaches. The other vertical side of the U (where the parallel cross member attaches to the perpendicular cross member) will need about a 6-inch patch, also with only a flange along the bottom edge.
Middle Cross Member gutted. The yellow lines show where patch panels will go |
I'll have to recreate this rusty bit. It covers the bottom of the Middle Cross Member Remember Alphie is belly up in the picture above |
Rear
Cross Member: I can see some crusty
rust, but I haven’t taken a grinder to it yet.
More later.
Spot Welder: You may have seen Wayne Siebrecht’s You Tube
channel – he’s restoring a Tiger with bad rocker panels, not nearly as bad as Alphie’s
but that’s neither here nor there. His
video’s are quite helpful. Anywho, he pointed
me toward the HF spot welder. So I
figured, if it’s mutt’s nuts for Wayne, I'd give it a try.
My circuit breaking spot welder |
My spot welder is the bees frickin
knees! It made fabbing up the new chunk
of box frame much faster and easier than plug-welding it with my MIG. (Editorial Note: I have been referring to “plug-welding” as
“fill-welding” in previous post. They
seem like synonyms to me, but most people on the interwebs use the term "plug
weld", so count me in.)
The spot welder pulls some juice –
the instructions tell you this, but it’s a bigger problem than I expected! You can’t plug it into an extension cord,
even a hefty one. When I was welding up
the box frame section, I kept tripping the breaker. Any resistance will load to circuit. For example, the welding tips were a little
loose creating enough resistance to trip the breaker. I found that I had to turn everything off on
the garage plug circuit (which included the plugs in the kitchen) helped.
I found that it would make a
couple of welds and the next one would trip the breaker, but there didn’t seem
to be a pattern of how many welds it would make on the trot nor how much time I
waited between welds. Apparently, if the
garage fridge was running, it tripped the breaker, if it wasn’t, it welded
right along with no worries. Now, I turn
off the fridge for spot welding, just don’t forget to turn it back on!
A Quick How-To: The mating
surfaces being spot-welded must be clean, a bit scuffed and in tight contact
with each other. Any rust or space
between the surfaces creates resistance that will compromise the weld. And, uh, the little sparks shoot out of the
weld are damned hot and will burn through anything other than leather gloves. It’ll make ya cuss - wanna see where it
burned my little pinky?
A Portable Spot Welder: The
cord on the spot welder is only about two feet long. Since I can’t drag Alphie within two feet of one
of the two outlets in the garage, spot welding on the car itself is a problem.
[Side Rant: Why do builders
only put two outlets in garages, fer sod’s sake?! When I build my cavernous Garage Mahal, I’ll
put an outlet every two bloody feet and at a 220 outlets on each wall! TVA will write my name on a wall somewhere!]
This adapter lets me use the higher amp circuit on my generator |
Just so happens that I have a gas-powered
generator. After the great power outage
of 2011, Dad decided to give his offspring generators, thanks Pops! I wrestled it out from its corner of the
garage, dusted it off, fired it up and plugged in the spot welder. When I pulled the trigger, the generator did
a little torquey dance and died. I upped
the idle and tried it again. It burned a
good spot weld but still did its torquey dance and died. I found an adapter while digging in my Dad's stuff that will let me use the higher amp circuit - I'll keep you posted.
Higher amps but still 120 volts |
Rocker Restoration continues and I’ll update as I take on new acres of rust.
Closing Health Note: I have
created a nightmare of ragged metal edges that are ravenously hungry. Wear your damn gloves, and buy more Band-Aids
(sorry, adhesive bandages)!
2 comments:
Thanks for putting up your blog I'm starting my sunbeam resto so I'm enjoying the inspiration, good luck
Cheers Andy
Ping me through the blog if I can help you with your lost cause! I hope your cause is less lost than mine. I'll be adding a page in the next couple of weeks
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