MotoDave
Well-known member
I've never really liked the look of the old school gas caps that came on my '62 Scout 80, they stand off of the body signifcantly. Plus mine are missing, and not trivial to find NOS. So a while ago I came across some sweet looking flush mount fuel filler caps, intended for homebuilt aircraft 
http://www.aircraftspruce.com/pages/ap/fuel_caps_zacs/acstlockffc.php
Now, if i'm putting airplane parts on a crappy old truck, I better make them look good, right? The easy answer is to mount them on the face of the body, but I really wanted them flush. I had a big chunk of delrin left over from a project at work that came home with me, and a 5 gallon bucket of chips later I have a 2 piece die set:
I made another quick tool to center the hole saw on the existing fuel filler hole.
Slow and steady with the big wrist breaker drill, and we have a concerningly large hole in the side of the body
Using a 9/16 bolt to draw the dies together and my impact gun, the recess in the body is formed
Finished result came out better than I had hoped for using plastic tooling.
Anyways, it isn't much in terms of overall progress on the truck, but it was a successful weekend project that I'm very pleased with. I'm no expert at metal work, but its pretty satisfying when something like this goes to plan.
http://www.aircraftspruce.com/pages/ap/fuel_caps_zacs/acstlockffc.php
Now, if i'm putting airplane parts on a crappy old truck, I better make them look good, right? The easy answer is to mount them on the face of the body, but I really wanted them flush. I had a big chunk of delrin left over from a project at work that came home with me, and a 5 gallon bucket of chips later I have a 2 piece die set:
I made another quick tool to center the hole saw on the existing fuel filler hole.
Slow and steady with the big wrist breaker drill, and we have a concerningly large hole in the side of the body
Using a 9/16 bolt to draw the dies together and my impact gun, the recess in the body is formed
Finished result came out better than I had hoped for using plastic tooling.
Anyways, it isn't much in terms of overall progress on the truck, but it was a successful weekend project that I'm very pleased with. I'm no expert at metal work, but its pretty satisfying when something like this goes to plan.
