I charge 2-3$ per 3" louver with a $50 minimum. Paint must be removed from both sides. Sometimes the inner structure must be removed. You can pay me to R&R it or do it your self.
Readhead,
Just curious, since you are saying the paint must be removed, are you using a beadroller for the louvers, and saying the dies will slip on the metal if painted? Or does this also apply to the press version?
Reason I'm asking, my dad was considering putting louvers in his hood, his friend said he could do it but it would require the paint to be removed as well. My dad had not idea which method he used for the louvers.
Thanks,
Zach
& no body shop guy is going to want to deal with painting it afterwards... $3 each to stamp them.... $25 each to paint & polish the ******* thingsAnd any body shop person is not going to want to strip a louvered hood if the paint hasn't been removed first.
Can anyone shed light on how this is done
Those style louvers use a dedicated sized punch, as Zeke has shown. Longer louvers, such as you see on the side of typical early 30's vehicles can be done with tooling such as this shown in a Lennox TE150 and Neil Dunder tooling.. The louver length is determined by the machine operator, and the ends are "coined" by rotating the handle to the side on the ends of the very last pass.
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Could louvers be punched here neatly and in a line?