CovKid wrote:And if you own a bay, essential










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normal mild steel 0.3 gauge
HarryMann wrote:normal mild steel 0.3 gauge
What sort of gauge is that Kev?
.3, never heard of that
18 swg, 16 swg, 20 swg
.3 gauge?
The T25 uses about .8 ~ .9mm (20 swg) for many body panels, 1.2mm (18 swg)and 1.5~1.6 (16 swg) mm for a lot of structural members and 2mm (14 swg) and 5mm (3/16") in highly stressed areas (e.g. rear cross-member, 5mm jacking points)
murdoch wrote:is it as bad as mine ?
still waiting for a few bits before i start it.
stuff like this is new to me too, but love getting stuck in sometimes. if i do ""cock"" it up, i'll just take it to the shop.
good luck
the C pillar is about 3" short of the sill, amongst other missing metal,
mark1967 wrote:Body repairs are a given on a van used on the UK`s roads for 20 odd yrs.Lots of good advice given already.Plenty more to be had once you "dive in with the angry grinder" Mig welding forum is brilliant as already mentioned.I learnt to mig weld a few years back more or less self taught,but it wasnt the actual welding that worried me it was the methods of doing it i.e. where to cut,where to clamp,how to make patches etc. I found the most helpful thing was lurking on classic car forums etc following resto threads as you get plenty of step by step photos and you get a feel of what the crack is.There are a few good ones on here but this one I found very helpful,the bloke is a hero:
http://retrorides.proboards.com/index.c ... read=70135
Be warned its quite long and very pic heavy !
And tack in, copper block used again to stop the edge burning away when welding, the trick is to start welding on the copper block and work inwards, rather than outwards.
This would be my top tip for any edge welding like this whether using a copper block or not, start at the edge and weld in, if you work out towards the edge, the heat builds up and the edges can easily be burnt away.