If you are seeking a quality rust repair and don't know good from bad, follow along and I'll show you the basics so you will know what is involved. I like to always be an informed shopper when something is as expensive and important as your car.
Bill, we'll look at rocker panels directly. Today I made a short video showing how to separate factory spot welds. After gaining full access to your rockers, this will be where you start. I'll walk you and the GPF'ers through other steps, but this is the part that so many car fixing guys cringe at. Its cake, I swear. Check it out-
Dragged out the fender off my 99 GT, it has a bracket made onto the fender at the bottom front. lets remove that. I use air at the shop so these are what I grab for this task:
THERE IS NOTHING IN THIS PHOTO THAT COSTS MORE THAN $30 NEW
Counter clockwise from top left in that photo:
BTW- "I DON'T LIVE NEAR A HF" IS NO EXCUSE. SHOP ONLINE OR LOCALLY ELSEWHERE FOR SIMILAR DEALS
Plain old $20 Mechanix gloves, original style
http://www.harborfreight.com/air-to...rill-with-keyed-chuck-and-key-94585-2932.html
A 3-way painter's baseboard tool, used by me for separating stubborn welds. Most painter's tools are 6 or 7 way now, not sure where I got this one.
safety glasses
Hammer from a kit containing three, plus dollies. $60, on sale for $30
http://www.harborfreight.com/7-piece-body-and-fender-set-31277.html
Guarded, insulated cutoff tool $25
http://http://www.walmart.com/ip/Campbell-Hausfeld-TL053500AV-Cut-Off-Tool-Tool/36710779
Die grinder, $15, on sale for $10
http://www.harborfreight.com/1-4-quarter-inch-inline-die-grinder-kit-53177.html
That die grinder comes with a few handy stones, bonus! The mandrel which mounts the wheel on the grinder is something I have had forever. One could be made with a bolt but this has left hand threads. You can use whatever other kind of sander or grinder you like. I usually level my new welds with the cutoff wheel first then a grinder and/or the purple wheel. For leveling lots of welds I use a thicker cutoff wheel. For cutting, a 1/16". For grinding, a 3/16" thick cutoff wheel is great. Like a rock. 3M and Norton are good cutoff wheel brands. Others are also good, many are out there. Never use one thats been wet and always discard before it gets too small, they can break. Thats a good reason to use a guarded cutoff tool.
3M purple (Clean-N-Strip XT) wheel. We buy in four packs but singles are $15 at this site:
http://www.eastwood.com/5-x-1-2-cle...ode=ga220010&gclid=CI_11LqJm74CFaNj7AodDQcAsA
They are also available with twist-lock mounting and similar products exist but this is my fav. Lasts long.
Drills- I have two, to speed myself up. 20$ each, on sale for $15
http://www.harborfreight.com/air-to...rill-with-keyed-chuck-and-key-94585-2932.html