Having trouble finding a specialist bodyshop in South London that will give me a quote for my insurance company. The ones I have asked want to use their own accident management company, which I want to avoid.
A guy at my local garage has said he can do it. He said the way he would do it is to weld pins to the outside so he can pull it out, then skim the outside. Does this sound like the correct way to do it?
management company/accountants **********
your right with your appraisal hehe
yes something like a magic puller or equivalent will pull that out no issues,
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Millimeter square contact. Using consumable tips ,twist half turn and they come off leaving zero residue ,da over and your offf ,don't confuse it with some others that do a spot weld ,have a read up on it they work really well
metalmick8y wrote:Millimeter square contact. Using consumable tips ,twist half turn and they come off leaving zero residue ,da over and your offf ,don't confuse it with some others that do a spot weld ,have a read up on it they work really well
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Thanks. Found a place not too far away that sounds like they might know what they're doing.
Thought I might try to get the rest of the bodywork fixed when the van goes in for the damage repair so will keep it in this thread.
Saw some orange coloured runs on the near side and it looks like the sliding door rail is VERY rusty. How big a job is this? Will it require a whole new planel? Can't really get to it to take a photo but I know it's through to the other side.
As one panel needs repainting anyway I've decided to tackle the rusty seams
Started sanding the area behind the rear offside wheel. Any tips how to tackle the seam? So far have used dremel with sanding wheel (because that's what Ive got) and poundshop sanding block with 80 grit paper.
It currently looks like this:
Metal starting to show through so it's not all rust! But don't want to make it worse by doing something really wrong. Any tips?
get a heavy duty craft knife and you will cut loads of the crap out the seam, dremel with a wafer disc in and go easy , biggest common prob i come across is where folks grind away the edges of the panels
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