SteveH-CO
Well-known member
The Victim:
My boss got smacked in her '00 Taurus and it pushed in the B pillar about 1.5". The rear door turned nearly inside out, and the skin peeled loose. The front door was clipped hard. Major dogleg damage, such that the full size tire would not clear the opening. Zero suspension damage, thankfully. I installed the minispare to get it home - the first ever decent use of a minispare tire! Car frame was straight and it drove fine. Only 94K miles, so worth saving.
The Method:
Of course, a 15 year old Taurus with this kind of damage is totaled, unless you redneck the repair. With the advice of a veteran paint and body guy, I secured the car to a tree (on the frame) and hitched up the '88 Land Cruiser chained to the door post hinges and the dog leg, using a 6" C-clamp. Got the door post almost perfect, and the dog leg 'good enough'. Many layers of folded metal in the dogleg and a lot of blind areas.
The Result:
I found two matching junkyard doors (very clean) for $85/each, and used a porta power to do the final tweaking, after hanging the doors. About 20 hours labor to get it such that the doors close and seal properly, and all door electricals work, save the rear window. I charged her $500 - $200 for parts, $300 for labor. I learned a LOT - that was the best part. The boss is very pleased with the price/appearance/function.
The last two photos require that you click on a link - not sure why?
My boss got smacked in her '00 Taurus and it pushed in the B pillar about 1.5". The rear door turned nearly inside out, and the skin peeled loose. The front door was clipped hard. Major dogleg damage, such that the full size tire would not clear the opening. Zero suspension damage, thankfully. I installed the minispare to get it home - the first ever decent use of a minispare tire! Car frame was straight and it drove fine. Only 94K miles, so worth saving.
The Method:
Of course, a 15 year old Taurus with this kind of damage is totaled, unless you redneck the repair. With the advice of a veteran paint and body guy, I secured the car to a tree (on the frame) and hitched up the '88 Land Cruiser chained to the door post hinges and the dog leg, using a 6" C-clamp. Got the door post almost perfect, and the dog leg 'good enough'. Many layers of folded metal in the dogleg and a lot of blind areas.
The Result:
I found two matching junkyard doors (very clean) for $85/each, and used a porta power to do the final tweaking, after hanging the doors. About 20 hours labor to get it such that the doors close and seal properly, and all door electricals work, save the rear window. I charged her $500 - $200 for parts, $300 for labor. I learned a LOT - that was the best part. The boss is very pleased with the price/appearance/function.
The last two photos require that you click on a link - not sure why?
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