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Try to weld in or patch over

ramdough

Well-known member
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Location
Austin, Texas
I have a 6 spots (3 shown in the picture) that I need to patch.

3A202151-E12B-4570-B926-A9BB900ED6F3.jpeg

No one will probably ever see it. Should I try to weld it in (I am not the best at thin metal), or patch over with a small plate and body caulk?

this Is not a show truck.
Thanks!
 

INFChief

Well-known member
722
1,348
93
Location
New York
I have a 6 spots (3 shown in the picture) that I need to patch.

View attachment 863630

No one will probably ever see it. Should I try to weld it in (I am not the best at thin metal), or patch over with a small plate and body caulk?

this Is not a show truck.
Thanks!
Tap them flat then tack weld a small piece of filler. That, or simply put a patch over the whole thing - rivet in place.
 

MarkM

CODE BROWN...It's all going to sh~t !
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,081
1,972
113
Location
WOBURN. MA.
If possible weld it. If welding is no good then I would go with Gorilla hair filler as it bridges gaps well and resists cracking. Easy fix.

Mark

american_flag.gif
 

Karl kostman

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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Location
Fargo ND
Ramdough if it were mine and because they are pretty ugly looking, looked like bolts that pulled through? I would pound them flat with hammer on both sides and cut steel patches and weld them in place then grind them flat and coat the patches with a light coat of bondo then sand and paint. My feeling is if your going to put the effort into it then do it correctly, only my opinion.
 

Captaincarrier

Active member
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241
43
Location
St Pete, FL
Ramdough if it were mine and because they are pretty ugly looking, looked like bolts that pulled through? I would pound them flat with hammer on both sides and cut steel patches and weld them in place then grind them flat and coat the patches with a light coat of bondo then sand and paint. My feeling is if your going to put the effort into it then do it correctly, only my opinion.

X2

I use clear plastic wrap (from the kitchen drawer) outline the problem area and cut my fill pieces. Tack weld, flair it in, sand it out.
 
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