csp
Well-known member
Back in Oct-17 a woman who decided it was more important to send that text out than actually driving took a swipe at my '97 F250 that had not been in an accident since new. Now I'm finally getting around to repairing it.
I got a complete cab in great shape for next to nothing to be a donor in the area mine has damage. I was going to remove the entire right rear corner panel of that cab from top to bottom at all of the seams and use it to replace mine. In the photos there are arrows denoting these seams.
I'm now considering only removing the lower half and cutting it where a solid blue line is shown in the photos. Doing so eliminates needing to cut out many spot welds, including the area of the gutter which I'm not sure how it was originally assembled. I also believe that the top corner has a seam inside that isn't readily accessible.
Any advice from the experts on the best path to take? I'm not worried about body working the seam I would be cutting into this corner panel.
The replacement cab does have one dent below a body line seam that won't be a big deal at all to body work.
I got a complete cab in great shape for next to nothing to be a donor in the area mine has damage. I was going to remove the entire right rear corner panel of that cab from top to bottom at all of the seams and use it to replace mine. In the photos there are arrows denoting these seams.
I'm now considering only removing the lower half and cutting it where a solid blue line is shown in the photos. Doing so eliminates needing to cut out many spot welds, including the area of the gutter which I'm not sure how it was originally assembled. I also believe that the top corner has a seam inside that isn't readily accessible.
Any advice from the experts on the best path to take? I'm not worried about body working the seam I would be cutting into this corner panel.
The replacement cab does have one dent below a body line seam that won't be a big deal at all to body work.
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