First things first I had to determine where to cut the outer body panel at to open up access to the inner sheet metal. Using the Spot Weld Cutter I cut out all the spot welds that needed removing. I bought this set of panel separators online and they really came in handy on this job. The cab here is pushed rearward, also towards the driver's side, and the Inner panel is folded up. I had to go much lower than the Driver's side to repair the damage.
Now I have to remove the middle panel without cutting into the inner panel.
There is a few spots with 3 layers of sheet metal and after surveying the Cab welds I really need to save the inside all the way up to where the Back Glass flange is located as it is welded way back into the back of the Cab. Days & Days of work would be needed if I remove the Inner Panel.
Using the green tape as a cutting guide I cut out the Middle Panel.
This folded up piece of Inner Panel I spent quite some time with a body hammer & dolly straightening it up enough to use. I got it pretty close.
Now opening up access to the top seams the inner most seam also must be the lowest.
I'm using the green tape to help guide a cut line to correct the rounded cut made by the Recycler.
To match my cut on the replacement panel you can see how the tape hangs off the right side edge. I'm basically cutting a straight line to work to in the Roof Middle section.
You can see I'm peeling the waste metal away.
Got a good fit now. Clamping is important to the metal doesn't draw while welding. If you look close at the bottom clamping point in the second picture here you can see the corner of the replacement part is tucked in between two panels that go across the back of the cab.
Overlapping the bottom due to the thin nature to the sheet metal provided some extra spine. I left part if the Middle structure intact this time and am going to weld it all up.
the rough in cuts I'm using a Cut-Off Wheel, it really speed up the fitting process. You have to pass something over the edges afterwards as a huge burr remains after cutting. The bur will cause you to have a bad fit up for final cutting.
I'm clamping the panel in well to cut both the original & replacement panel in one cut to provide a perfect fit and the necessary gap in the sheet metal since I'm using a MIG welder to weld the panel in place.
You can see how fine the gap is, this is the relief cut to Butt weld join the panels.
Each weld is like a stitch, I weld a puddle then stop and index my hand over a 1/8 - 3/16 of an inch then make another "stitch" quickly before the glow of the puddle completely fads. Once welded I cleaned all the weld surfaces well with a wire brush before applying Weld-Thru primer over the weld work.
The final panel is fitted rough and I decided my focus was waning so I will finish this panel tomorrow.
Only issue I have is my door gap is a little larger than the other side. $20K to $2500 for the repair I can live with the little extra gap.
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