I am doing a rebuild of a Landcruiser Ute, whilst stripping the paint I found some rust that had previously been "repaired" so this was my first real attempt at a patch panel.
That is a very good example of exactly how to NOT fix a rust patch
Step one make a tape template.
Then transfer that to a suitable piece of body metal, in this case a panel I got from the local crash shop
Then start trimming the guard to expose the true quality of the previous repair

I will have a bit of work to do on the inner section as well.
Then make the patch panel and see how it fits. Hopefully my repair will be an improvement on the previous effort.
Obviously the frame needed some attention before I weld on the outer patch panel.
When I removed the bog there was a big rust hole, you can see in the first picture where I drilled that out and attempted some spot weld repairs which it was pretty obvious was not going to work. So time to make a patch panel for the inner frame and weld it in. the start of the panel (cut to shape) is in the first picture.
Time to start shaping, a small V shaped gutter was the first spot to get the hammer treatment.
Add some curves, a return and a return folded edge and its starting to look something like the piece to be cut out.
Then cut the rusty section out and do the final trim and fit.
Then weld it in and clean up the welds. I have a bit more cleaning up to do on the outer edge. The welds in the top recess I will leave as they are. It’s quite difficult to get in and grind them and they will never be seen and won’t interfere with the outer panel, so they will stay as is.
After I finish the cleaning up I will sand blast that section and give it a few coats of primer before welding on the outer patch.
Onto the outer patch.
A view of the back side of the repair, that just needs some tidying up before priming and painting remembering that area can not be seen once assembled.
what I started out with.
And the end result of the repair.
A skim of body filler over the repair area and it should be as good as new
Cheers Andrew