Basics of panel alignment [Archive] - Chevelle Tech

: Basics of panel alignment


MARTINSR
Jan 11th, 02, 6:04 PM
I started this a week or so ago. It may help someone align their panels, if it does than the time was well spent. I sure as heck know that some of you may have many more tips. PLEASE post them so we all can learn. If it looks like something valuable to you, print it out and put it in you file of "good stuff" like I have. It is nice not to have to hunt for it later.


Hood alignment: Let’s start with raising and lowering the rear of the hood. If the car you are working on has a hinge that sits on top of the cowl, your only options are to shim or bend the hinge. Bending the hinge slightly is one way to move it. If you need to come up in the rear you can put a small block of wood or other item on the hinge, to bend it. When you close the hood down (NOT ALL THE WAY) it will get in the way of the hood closing and bend the rear or the hinge up. If you need to bend it down, the only option may be to remove it and bend it a little. You can also shim the bolts between the hood and the hinge, more on this later.
If you have a hood where the hinge mounts on the side of the fender like in an older car or truck, you want to "rotate" the hinge on the fender. Just pushing the hinge up and down will give you very little movement on the top of the hood.
This is the strange little trick that you have to remember, if you raise the back of the hood on the hinge or raise the back of the hinge on the fender the hood will go up. If you raise the "front" of the back of the hood ON THE HINGE or the hinge to the fender it will go down. What you have to remember is you are working with a pivot point in the hinge, not a stationary part.
If you loosen the FRONT bolt on the hood (where it bolts to the hinge) and put a shim, or washer between the hood and hinge, this will LOWER the hood on that side. If you put that same washer under the rear bolt it will RAISE the rear of the hood on that side.
So, if you loosen the bolts from the hinge to fender and close the hood, the hinge will rotate on down in the front right? This will raise the REAR of the hood like putting a shim in the back bolt between the hinge and hood!
What you need to do to lower the back the hood is to loosen the bolts (only slightly) and PUSH UP on the front of the hood. This rotates the hinges back, thus raising the front of the hinge and lowering the hood in the back.
If the hinges are warn out it won’t change how high the hood sits when the wear, not by more than a fraction of an inch. And I have never seen a car with these style hinges that you couldn't put the hood a half inch LOWER than the fenders if you wanted to. The adjustment is HUGE on these cars. That is one of the things that is easy to do on them is align panels.
I recommend you remove the striker or latch from the hood so that you can move it up and down without worrying about the latch grabbing the hood. After you have aligned the hood, take a piece of dumb-dumb or clay or something similar and put it on the latch. This way you can see exactly where it hits when you do install the latch. You bring the hood down till you just tap this dumb-dumb but DON'T LATCH IT. Just so the hood makes an indentation in the clay/dumb-dumb. This tells you where you have to move the latch.
I do this at work everyday, by my self so if you can't get help this is the trick. Always leave one bolt on the hinge tight. If you want to rotate it back, leave the front bolt tight. If you want to rotate it forward, leave the rear bolt tight. When you move the hood forward or back on the hinge, leave the bolts snug enough that you have to tap on the edge of the hood to get it to move. Or if it needs to go back, leave the bolts a little snug, and wiggle the hood up and down and the weight of the hood will make it slide down. Remember it only needs a 1/16" or so to make a 3/16" or more change at the front. To pull the hood forward on the hinge loosen them so they are still a little snug so you have to pull up on the back of the hood to make it slide that little bit. If you loosen it up so it moves anywhere you want it, YOU WILL NEVER KNOW HOW MUCH YOU MOVED IT AND YOU WILL MOVE IT TOO MUCH, GUARANTEED.
Get the hood laying flat first, then move the hood forward or back on each side to make the hood fit the hole between the fenders. If the gap is large on the front right and small on the front left, then the hood needs to me moved back on the right side. As you move the hood back on a side it will close up the gap in the front of that side and open it at the rear of that side.
You may need to move fenders too. Just do each change slowly, move it VERY LITTLE. Look at the bolt and washer as you move the panel, you will see where the washer used to be, the amount is much easier to control if you watch the washer movement.
If you need to move the hood up or down at the front, you have a few ways to do it. First, on each side there are the “bumpers”. The hood bumpers are located at each front corner and look like a bolt with a rubber pad on top. Just unlock the jam nut and raise or lower the “bolt” so it holds the hood at the height you need to match the fender. You may find that the hood won’t go low enough even with the bumper down far enough. The latch may not be down far enough. When you close the hood, you shouldn’t be able to pull up on the hood or push it down. The latch should be tight enough to hold it against the bumpers tight, but not too tight. If you have to apply too much force to open the hood or it opens with a loud POP, the latch is probably too tight. If it is at the right height but you can lift it up some, then the latch needs to be moved down.

Doors: If the doors are off the car, bolt the hinges to the door and the cowl in the middle of the movement allowed. Let’s face it, it “shouldn’t” be too far off the center of holes. If the doors are on or if after putting them on things are way out of whack, raise the door up on the hinges as far as it will go while still staying about the right height. You always want to start high, it is much easier to come down than go up. Besides this is the ONLY time you will loosen all the bolts on the door. I don’t mean ALL the bolts, leave the hinge to cowl (or center post on a four door) tight. Only loosen the door to hinge bolts. Unless it is WAY down then you may need to move the hinges up too. But do one at a time, both door to hinge or both hinge to cowl/center post.

While moving the hinges aligning the door NEVER loosen all the bolts on the hinge, NEVER. Loosen all but one, just till it is still a little looser than “snug”. Leave that last on just a little snug. Let’s say the door fits well but is a little too far forward. NEVER loosen top and bottom hinges and move it forward. Loosen the top hinge to cowl/center post as described above and lift the rear of the door, a LITTLE. This will push the upper hinge forward. Now TIGHTEN that one bolt that was left snug. Do the same on the lower hinge, pushing down, but remember the weight of the door is helping, so little push is needed.
If the door fits well but is out at the top or the bottom, again, loosen ONE hinge to DOOR in the manner described and push it out or in. If it is out or in at the top rear for instance, move the bottom front in the opposite direction. This will pivot the door on the striker, and move the rear top where you want. Moving the bottom rear takes moving the top front of course.

You may need to twist the door. If the front fits well and rear is out at the top (or bottom, just reverse) you can put a block of wood at the rear of the door at the top lets say and push in on the bottom to twist the door. Some will take a LOT of force to bend, and be VERY careful not to let your fingers hang around the outside of the door edge!! I lost a finger nail doing this on a ’69 Shelby GT500 convertible once (remember it well) when the block of wood fell out with all my weight on the door while twisting!!

Tip: If you are hanging the door and you have access to the hinges (either through the wheel well with the skirt off or if the fender it’s self is off) you can simply hold the door up to the opening and push the latch shut. Then put the bolts in the hinge. I can often install doors all by my self in this way.

Deck lid: The trunk lid is pretty much like the hood but the hinges don’t move at all on the body (usually). So shimming and twisting are a few of your only options beyond the movement in the slotted holes on the hinge. Bending the hinge or pushing up or down on the sides of the quarters, front or rear panel are the others. These should be done ONLY after all other things are tried.

Fenders: Most of the tips for doors and the hood work here, with a little twist or two. Start with fitting the rear top of the fender. I like to put all the bolts in, loose. Not falling out loose, just so the fender would easily move. Close the door, and with the hood open adjust the gap at the top of the rear of the fender to door. After you tighten other bolts this cannot be modified so, do it first. Tighten the bolt under the hood closest to the door to secure the position. You may need to shim a bolt at the rear of the fender to the cowl, to move the fender forward or back. After you have that bolt tight and the gap is to your liking open the door and tighten the rear fender bolt that is at the top of the fender in the door jamb. Now do the bottom bolt, with the door closed, adjust your gap. You may need to wedge a flat blade screwdriver or body spoon to “force” the fender forward to get the desired gap. Or just the opposite, use a 2x4 or something similar off the front tire to force the fender back to get the gap. This is one of the hard spots to get nice because you have to get both the gap and the in and out of the fender to door at the same time with the same bolt. Some cars have two bolts that are far enough apart to get the gap and tighten the front bolt and then pull the fender in or out and tighten the rear bolt to get the flush fit of the panels.


General tips: Bending a panel or adjacent panel is sometimes required. You can get this done in a number of ways, one is to use a block of wood. Let’s say that along the edge of the hood there is a spot that is high. Well you can’t adjust it down, the front and the rear are perfect. So you can lay a block of wood on the spot, right at the edge where it is strong. Using a big hammer (the bigger the better, trying to make a small hammer do the job can cause a lot of damage) hold the block and strike it nice and solid. Then check the results, you may need many strikes to do it. In doing this you may want to support the hood at the front with a block of wood under the hood. This way the hood is up off the fender and it will bend easier because of the solid rest it has. You can also put the block under the edge of the hood at a low spot and with steady pressure bend it down at a point if you need it.

If you are working with very tight tolerances, you can actually grind the edge of a panel or jamb to get an extra fraction of an inch. Be VERY careful and using a fine disk like 80 or 120 take a LITTLE off. You don’t want to grind the metal thin of course but a LITTLE can make a big difference when you are fighting for fractions. Now, you really won’t be cutting too much metal, you are really just cleaning off ALL the primer and paint there. Then when you prime it, don’t put a lot or sand it thin so there will be very little on the edge.

You may want to paint the hinge with a little contrasting paint. Do it with the hinge bolted on, right over the bolts. This way you can see easier how much you have moved it.

These are just ideas that I have used over the years and some may work for you some won’t, but it is a start.


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Fan of anything that is interesting and moves human beings.
1965 Buick Gran Sport Convertible
1965 Buick Skylark H/T
1948 Chevy PU with 401 Buick




[This message has been edited by MARTINSR (edited 01-11-2002).]

normie
Jan 12th, 02, 4:59 PM
Just in time.. my baby is heading off to the media blaster on tuesday... Shouldn't be more than a month or so when I am going too have to do this all http://www.chevelles.com/forum/smile.gif Thanks Martinsr

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X-Ray View of my Chevelle :D (http://www.normieschevelle.com/sideview.jpg)
Getting Closer (http://www.normieschevelle.com/passfull.jpg)

MARTINSR
Jan 12th, 02, 5:07 PM
Normie, hope it can be of some help. http://www.chevelles.com/forum/smile.gif

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1965 Buick Gran Sport Convertible
1965 Buick Skylark H/T
"Fan of most anything that moves human beings"

Randy Mosier
Jan 12th, 02, 8:28 PM
Excellent post! This should save a lot of time over the trial and error method of learning how to align panels.

WayneK
Jan 13th, 02, 7:58 AM
You have successfully transcribed a complex set of actions into words.
A gift I do not possess by the way.
My hat's off to you for a JOB WELL DONE.

Wayne

70isfine
Jan 13th, 02, 8:02 AM
Normie,i guess you found someone to blast your car?Let us know how it turns out.

dreinecke
Jan 13th, 02, 9:08 AM
Thanks for the great post! I just used it to do my hood - looks 100% better! Now, off to the front fender...

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David Reinecke - aka - FINE 68
1968 Chevelle 300 Sport Coupe Deluxe
www.geocities.com/jdreinecke (http://www.geocities.com/jdreinecke)

RT
Jan 13th, 02, 5:46 PM
Great post Martinsr, Thanks for taking the time to put it into words. I'm assuming you're the same Martinsr from the Autobodystore web site, b/c I've seen alot of good advice there also.
One thing that I thought of while reading; is there a best sequence to aligning doors/hood/fenders? Should you do doors first, followed by fenders and finish with hood?
Thanks,
Rich

MARTINSR
Jan 14th, 02, 5:41 AM
Yes Rich, that is me over at autobodystore.com. It is not my site understand, just a nice place to visit.

On the order of panels, I start with the doors, for a couple of reasons. First, the rockers and quarters CAN'T be changed (for the large part, refer to grinding and pushing metal with wood blocks and things) so you start with fiting the door to the rocker and quarter. On an "A" body up thru '68, you also have the wing window to align to the body. So, you need to fit the door to the body so the window fits first.
Now, you may need to go back and "screw" with something you have already did to "rob Peter" (you know, to "pay Paul") so a panel you already did may not be EXACTLY where you want it.

One thing I didn't make clear, if all things were perfect, and the car had all original panels, never hit, all these "extras" may not me needed. You may not ever need to move metal around with a hammer, or "force" panels to fit. But the car IS about 30 or so years old, parts may not fit like the old General left it. Besides, as far as I am concerned, these '60s GM cars panels fit like CRAP from the factory. I personally like to get them better than new. The old General may have installed them on a Monday or Friday http://www.chevelles.com/forum/smile.gif

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1965 Buick Gran Sport Convertible
1965 Buick Skylark H/T
"Fan of most anything that moves human beings"

MARTINSR
Jan 19th, 02, 5:10 PM
I just got reminded of an interesting idea. You can drill a little pilot hole with a 1/8" drill through the hinge into the body before you remove the part. When you reinstall, just stick a drill bit or similar object into the hole to line it up. I have used this a time or two and it works well.

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1965 Buick Gran Sport Convertible
1965 Buick Skylark H/T
"Fan of most anything that moves human beings"

68racer
Jan 20th, 02, 8:03 AM
great post martinsr you are an asset to this board.

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My 68 (http://www.chevelles.com/showroom/68racer1.jpg)
My Engine (http://www.chevelles.com/showroom/68racer2.jpg)

MARTINSR
Jan 20th, 02, 8:22 AM
Well gee....shucks......thanks http://www.chevelles.com/forum/smile.gif

Really, I appreciate that.

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1965 Buick Gran Sport Convertible
1965 Buick Skylark H/T
"Fan of most anything that moves human beings"

sevt_chevelle
Jan 20th, 02, 8:58 AM
MARTINSR, what a excellant post! I've said it before, I enjoy reading what you have to say, and one of the few in my mind that make this site as good as it is. Keep up the good work...Eric

rusty66
Jan 20th, 02, 2:50 PM
Just wanted to show my appreciation. Thanks for taking the time to write down your valuable knowledge.

Rob

MARTINSR
Jan 20th, 02, 5:12 PM
Hey guys, no problem. I just feel that I do this stuff every day and if some of the things that I have learned can help, I will post it. I like seeing cars that enthusiast's build, they always seem different. The cars that shops do, just don't seem to have the same character.
If I can help some "garage restorer" get their car done, I'm happy to take the time.

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1965 Buick Gran Sport Convertible
1965 Buick Skylark H/T
"Fan of most anything that moves human beings"

Tom Mobley
Jan 20th, 02, 5:59 PM
MARTINSR,

This is great stuff and is going straight to archive so it will always be available, even after forum cleanups. Thanks for taking time to write and post this stuff, this kind of info is not available hardly anywhere.

You really add value here, and it sure is good to see your stuff after spending time slogging through the personal disputes that seem to be so common lately.

Tom

jimtdi
Oct 11th, 06, 12:24 AM
Great post going to try that. just retired from 30 years driving for a living
starting on my 67 elcamino having a great time working on it when I finishing it will post some pictures What part of the country are you
from i am here in bay area petaluma thanks again enjoy your postings
jim

MARTINSR
Oct 11th, 06, 12:33 AM
Cool, I used to go into the Napa store there in Petaluma, it was in my territory when I was a paint rep for Martin Senour paints. I wonder if Aaron is still working there? SUPER nice place to live, I love it there. Stop on into HotRodz and say hi to Mike and Wil for me. :)

Brian

snowtrav
Oct 11th, 06, 7:00 AM
Another hood adjustment issue is the alignment to the front header panel, Repro and some stock hoods don't line up well with the header panel. ie the corners will be flat and even but the center will be above the header panel or vise versa.
I had this issue with a repro ss hood,I adjusted it by placing a small piece of wood between the hood adjustment nut and the hood on both sides and with the palm of my hand on the center rail of hood press down. Take it slow check the hood alignment with the blocks out each time you press down.It took me 6 tries to get it right.

Buzzbomb
Sep 24th, 08, 1:54 PM
Yea, I know this thread is OLD. However, the information in this thread posted by MartinSr is the bomb, and warrants a boot from the bowels of TC back to the top :)

After finding THE cheapest door spring removal tool at Harbor Freight for $5, also thanks to TC, I went ahead and rebuilt one door/hinges set. I took the hinges OFF to rebuild them, and my door was adjusted so badly, it was literally tearing hunks out of the sill plate, AND was a real PITA to close IN the car since I had to hold up and pull at the same time. Needless to say, I didn't mark where they were at since they were off by a mile, had an additional washer on teh striker, AND a shim on the door to hinge "flange".

Long story short, the information for adjusting doors in this thread is SPOT ON, and worked AWESOME! With a hinge rebuild, a bottle jack for the back of the door, and MartinSr's instructions, I took my door from literally dragging on the bottom of the entry way to closing with a push from two fingers with minimal effort. It closes super easy IN the car now, and opens with one finger pull on the latch. I have NO more shim on the door, only the proper washer on the striker, and am really happy with the way this turned out.

I'm ready to do my other door, but am trying to figure out if there is some way to put the detent roller back on the pin. It's there, but not "rolling on the pin" like it should be. I thought maybe I'd be able to resecure it somehow back on the pin in lieu of buying a kit of two when I only need one.

Bottom Line- THANKS for all the A+ info, MartinSr!! :hurray:

MARTINSR
Sep 25th, 08, 1:58 AM
Wow, talk about a blast from the past, far out man. :) FREE BIRD, FREE BIRD!!!!

Thanks for the kind words, I'm glad it is still around to help.

Brian

chef
Nov 10th, 08, 9:15 PM
great post

MARTINSR
Nov 10th, 08, 10:23 PM
And thanks again!

Brian

66L78
Nov 10th, 08, 10:38 PM
Mr Martin, Lets take this one step farther, Is there anyway you can just come live with me and my family and be my own personal '' auto guy " I will doing all this shortly so great timing for me, thank you for the info supplied here,, Chuck

davewho1
Nov 10th, 08, 11:04 PM
Maybe this should be a sticky - moderators? :thumbsup:

MARTINSR
Nov 11th, 08, 1:27 AM
Mr Martin, Lets take this one step farther, Is there anyway you can just come live with me and my family and be my own personal '' auto guy " I will doing all this shortly so great timing for me, thank you for the info supplied here,, Chuck


With the net and places like this, you have thousands of "auto guys" at your disposal. And you don't even have to feed them breakfast. :)

Brian

ss396boy
Nov 12th, 08, 11:35 AM
Martin, how about one on fixing Oil Canning!!!! Can't get my firewall to stop doing it.

sevt_chevelle
Nov 12th, 08, 7:00 PM
Martin, how about one on fixing Oil Canning!!!! Can't get my firewall to stop doing it.


It depends if that oil can is there because the metal is stretched and causing the oil can OR if the metal is shrunken and causing the oil can.

Both stretched and shrunk metal can cause oil can but the repair process is different.
You need to know which is the cause.

If you take a small plumber's torch and lightly heat the oil can and the oilcan straights up then you have stretched metal and need to shrink it down.
If you heat it and theoil can gets worse then you need to stretch the metal back out...Eric

ss396boy
Nov 12th, 08, 7:58 PM
It depends if that oil can is there because the metal is stretched and causing the oil can OR if the metal is shrunken and causing the oil can.

Both stretched and shrunk metal can cause oil can but the repair process is different.
You need to know which is the cause.

If you take a small plumber's torch and lightly heat the oil can and the oilcan straights up then you have stretched metal and need to shrink it down.
If you heat it and theoil can gets worse then you need to stretch the metal back out...Eric

Thanks Eric.

I think it's a combined issue of both cases. I smoothed the FW by welding in a patch over the heater core in the FW, in addition to all the small holes. I'll have to try the torch trick and see which way the metal goes.

The bigged problem is trying to hammer/dolly that area. I need 6 ft long arms. I tried using the torch before and I stopped, since I didn't want to make thing worse. The canning seemed to be really bad at one point, push in the metal about 12 in above the tunnel area, pops out right away. I applied some heat, then cold rag, this made the oil can stayed pushed in untill I pushed on the opposite side of the metal, then it popped back. To me, this sounds like it need to be stretched a little more, going to try hammer dolly on the weld areas and see what happens. I can't believe the metal they used on this area is so damn thin.

edit:
In the following pic, you can see the area that was welded, In addition all the small holes. There is a vertical stamped piece that is to the right of the heater core hose openings. When I push in just to the right of that area, it pushes in/then pops back out.
http://img442.imageshack.us/img442/9078/dsc0049td0.th.jpg (http://img442.imageshack.us/my.php?image=dsc0049td0.jpg)
The oil canning is mostly in the area right above the trans tunnel, and to the left. I didn't do much welding there at all, so i'm kinda confused. Now, the question is where do i heat the area? in the center of the oil can areas or along the perimeter? (btw the FW is stripped to bare metal again)

MARTINSR
Nov 12th, 08, 10:20 PM
Martin, how about one on fixing Oil Canning!!!! Can't get my firewall to stop doing it.

With your firewall it is a little different, but here is a little start to understanding "oil canning".

"Basics of Basics" Flat panel repair.
By Brian Martin

When you have a large flat panel that is flexing the first thing you need to do is find out why. Sometimes you can stop it, other times you can’t. But if you can stop it, you’ll have a much easier time with the body filler work. Hoods, decklids, and the roof are particularly difficult because the heat and weight of the plastic filler can have an effect on the metal. The good news is many times it is very easy to repair.

First off, there is no such thing as a “flat” panel. All panels that appear flat actually have a slight crown or gentle bow up in the middle. Go to a flat panel and lay a straight edge across it. You will see that the straight edge in not touching the panel at the on the outer ends. If the panel were perfectly flat it would appear to the eye to be concave. It would also have no “body” and flex very easily. This is the problem with your large flexing panel; it has “lost” its crown and is now weak and flexible.

The first place to start your search for a culprit is under the panel. Many panels have inner structure that supports the outer skin. When the outer panel has been damaged the inner structure was bent down along with the outer. This inner structure can be in the form of just a simple inch or so wide support running across the panel to the complete support by a stamped panel that goes covers the underside of the panel. These full inner structures can commonly be found on hoods and decklids. The inner structure can sometimes be bent down, causing your flexing. It usually is very close to the outer skin, with just a thin layer of a foam or urethane adhesive. It may have small “dollops” of this foam or adhesive that has been squished between the inner structure and outer skin or even a thin piece of tarpaper.

You can push up on these low spots to return it to supporting the outer skin, as it should. But it is difficult because you can’t push it past where it needs to be. On this particular type of damage, the inner structure would need to go past the correct shape and then “relax” back down to where it belongs. It can’t do this of course because the outer panel is there and limits the inner structure from going up where it needs to go. Just as with looking at the “big picture” when you look at any dent, you need to search for a kink or bend that is holding the inner structure down in that area. If you apply pressure up on the low area and tap out these kinks, you may get it to stay back in shape. If these methods don’t get it back up to support the outer panel properly, you will need to “shim” between the two panels to get the outer panel up where it belongs. This can be done with sheet of tarpaper or more adhesive. As a last resort a thin piece of wood like a paint stirring stick can be used. Of course, this is a little on the funky side but if you are haven’t been able to correct the problem, something has to be done. What you have to watch out for is applying too much pressure in one area. If you were to force a piece of wood in there, you will likely be making a high spot on the outside. That would just give you in a whole new problem.

Sight down the body lines that are nearest the low, “oil canning” , or just plain flexing area. A body line is effectively the “edge” of the panel. Those crowns in the flat panel that I mention end at the body line. So each area in between the lines is sort of like an individual panel. Look to see if the body line is low, it may be holding down your panel. If it is, you need to push it up. To help you determine how straight the line is sometimes you can use a metal ruler as a “straight edge”. How can this be done on a crowned panel you ask? A metal carpenters yard stick will bend very easily, right? So what you do is lay the yard stick on it’s back against the panel and apply a little pressure on the outward edges low area where the metal is OK. You will then have a “curved straight edge”. I have a drawer with a number of these metal or aluminum rulers in it and find them very useful. I treat them like rice paper and they will last a lifetime.

So lets say that you have found that you have no low spots in the body lines or there were one or two and you repaired them. Now you have to look for something else that is holding the panel down. This can usually be found in the form of a “crown” or “brow”. When you put a dent in any panel the metal has to “go” somewhere. All panels have this crown, right? So as an example picture a metal rod that is 3 feet long. This rod has a slight bend to it. The center of the rod is up from the ends about three inches. If you were to push down on the center, the rod would get “longer”, right? So, if the ends of the rod were clamped in vices, the “extra” rod would force the areas on the sides of where you were pushing to go up. You panel does the same thing only on a much smaller scale. Most brows will be found on the outer edges of a panel, this includes of course at the edge of the body line. They are VERY common around the outer edges of a roof. Search around the outer edges of ANY bent roof and you will find them.

The brow or crown is a U, C, L or even I shaped high spot. In the center of that curved high spot is a low spot, sort of like a “pocket” in the brow. Just one or two of these will make a panel, especially a large panel look like a cotton sheet! What you have to do is to push up on that low spot while tapping down on the brow. When I say “tap” I mean TAP. Just the weight of the hammer bouncing off the brow will do it sometimes. Use a large VERY flat body hammer or a flat body spoon for this repair. If you are careful you can repair these brows with little to no plastic filler. Just take you time and keep checking the area with a block with sand paper or a vexon file if you have one for low and high spots.

Now, if you simply can eliminate the brow and low spot, you have won the battle. If it takes some plastic filler, so be it, you have given the panel it’s strength back and that is what matters.

MARTINSR
Nov 12th, 08, 10:22 PM
Martin, how about one on fixing Oil Canning!!!! Can't get my firewall to stop doing it.

Along with Erics tips, here is a "Basics of Basics" that may be of help as well...

http://autobodystore.com/ms15.shtml

Brian