sladey wrote:Barry wrote:Thanks for the comments chaps: really not sure I deserve them TBH.
I will admit to being very pleased with that little dented area though. Can't for the life of me figure out what could have happened there? Anyway, I tried to get the shape back on the car, but it was no good, the dent rods just couldn't even start to move it, and I was beginning to put tiny 'outies' (outward dents) in it.
With it on the bench though, I was able to work the dent inside-out with a nylon drift (doesn't stretch the metal further). After that, it was a case of floating the metal back downwards into the correct shape, and weld it back in. It's still my favourite part of the car, silly as it might sound. Just was a lovely metalwork excercise.
I hadn't fully appreciated that these were the same pieces of steel! So the Nylon drift doesn't stretch the metal further - is it just that it doesn't hit it so hard or that it's not strong enough to push it beyond it's original shape but it is strong enough to push it back into shape?
The nylon is great because it doesn't marr the metal like steel tools do. I just order up a metre at a time off of E-bay (white nylon, 1 inch round). It can be cut to a handy length (usually 3-6 inches depending on the job, obviously you end up with a load of different ones), and the working end linished to whatever shape you want.
In the above case, I just used a fairly radius, blunt chisel sort of shape. If I'd used metal straight down on the bench (with the work inbetween obviously) it would have marred the metal, and stretched it.
The main use for the nylon is for the hammer-forming: the two sections ahead of the battery boxes are hammer-formed from one piece of metal, and have no welds in them either. The metal is just floated down over the (primitive) hammerform. Same process for the parcelshelf corner. Note in the above photo, the only parts of the parcelshelf repair section that are fully formed are the areas I knew I would use. That's why it looks a bit 'soft' in some of the more central (middle of car) areas. Basically I get the best shape I can with the nylon, and then go in with various steel tools, all ground to different radii. These are used to chase into all of the detail: there is a formal name for this final finishing process, but it's slipped my mind: it'll come back to me as soon as the P.C.'s switched off

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Anyway, nylon: useful stuff and cheap as chips, so you can just make up a custom tool for each job. They do say that it can shatter, but I have to say I've given this stuff real welly (both of the above hammer-formed parts are in 18G steel, and you need to use a heavy hammer), and it's been fine. I would think you'd probably want to bin very heavily abused tools after a while though, just to be on the safe side, and wear goggles as well.
Damn, that phrase is right on the tip of my tonque .... what the hell is it?
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