Problem with door hinges and the bulkhead!

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  • brucejohn
    2nd Gear
    • Jul 2009
    • 215

    #16
    I think Travis and SafeAirOne have the best idea. I just went out and looked at a IIa bulkhead I have out back and cutting out and adding the repair piece looks challenging but doable. I doubt the captive nuts come with it.

    Call our hosts and ask about the taller door post piece (even though the link at their store doesn't work) which is available from other sources, the upper corner piece and the captive nuts. I mention the taller door piece becauase I think it includes the upper hinge point and the curve like the original posts appears too. Then you can decide what you think is best.

    The pictures of Travis' work are really nice, if you are close, that was a generous offer.

    Keep us posted on your progress.
    1982 SIII 109 RHD petrol project.

    Comment

    • Dashface
      Low Range
      • Nov 2007
      • 66

      #17
      Yeah, it's looking like I may have to just do the whole thing. I'll call up our hosts tomorrow when they're open again and see about the tall posts - as you point out, Brucejohn, the website is gibbled there so I can't see what they're like. If they're tall enough to make it a one-piece solution then that's obviously the way to go.

      I wish I could get Travis' help, but unfortunately I'm a long way away - up where a huge number of these NADAs went originally; Canada So, I'll be stuck with finding some local help.

      Comment

      • SafeAirOne
        Overdrive
        • Apr 2008
        • 3435

        #18
        Originally posted by Dashface
        If I'm going to put that top patch in, would I be well served to just go right ahead and do the whole post too do you figure?

        Also - does that top patch come with the captive nuts built in, or do you just weld some on there?
        The doorpost is much more involved that the patch. That patch is just a piece of sheet metal cut out and bent up. You just weld it over the existing area. The patch does nothing to solve your hinge anchor issue. Honestly, I'm not sure what holds your anchors in. Probably spot welds. Somebody with a Series IIa and below who has had their bulkhead apart can probably tell you if and how those anchor nuts can be accessed.

        I'm only familiar with the SIII, and it shows. Not sure what a SII bulkhead looks like, but can you access anything from the engine bay behind here?:


        --Mark

        1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel

        0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
        (9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).

        Comment

        • SafeAirOne
          Overdrive
          • Apr 2008
          • 3435

          #19
          Originally posted by brucejohn
          I mention the taller door piece becauase I think it includes the upper hinge point and the curve like the original posts appears too.
          The taller post includes the upper hinge captive nut slots (but not the captive nuts themselves). It comes in 2 pieces (the upright and the "foot" , where it mounts to the chassis outrigger).

          EDIT: Also be careful with the doorpost replacement--it is a VERY slippery slope, because as soon as you open everything up to access the doorpost, you find all sorts of other corrosion. You have to be prepared to deal with what you find:

          --Mark

          1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel

          0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
          (9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).

          Comment

          • brucejohn
            2nd Gear
            • Jul 2009
            • 215

            #20
            Originally posted by SafeAirOne
            ...but can you access anything from the engine bay behind here?:


            I forgot to add that to my last. No there is a another post that comes down from above that terminate about even with your arrow. The captive nuts in my iia bulkhead are two tapped holes in a piece of bar steel that must sit in a pocket. The pocket retains the bar while allowing wiggle to adjust the doors at the hinge attachment.

            I would probably try coming in through that rusted out hole first.
            1982 SIII 109 RHD petrol project.

            Comment

            • thixon
              5th Gear
              • Jul 2007
              • 909

              #21
              Dashface,

              The photos don't look bad, but its on it way there. First, Its fixable and won't be a challenge for someone with the skills to weld in new metal, so don't get all worked up over this. Second, if you don't want to do the work yourself, then check around your area and look for someone who's done restoration work. They don't have to have experience with rovers. The guy that taught me to do all this could fix that in his sleep, and he's never touched a rover. My only word of warning is that you need to be careful on the pricing. Some shops will rip you.

              Even better, try to find a "hobbyist" like me, or some guy known in your area that's done some restorations. In my experience, the work tends to be better than a lot of pro shops out there. I'm sure I'll get some feedback from the board on that comment!

              For example, I have a Triumph in my garage right now that has similar issues to your truck on the trunk lid, two of the fenders, and it needs new floor pans. The guy is paying me 5 grand to fix the rust (felt bad taking that much), prime the whole car, and hang and align the body (basically get it ready for the paint guy). The "professional shop" he took the car to first wanted 12 grand for the same work. He let them start, and three or four months in got tired of waiting. He had to pay 3 grand to get the car back. All the shop had done was dissasemble and bead blast the car, tack weld in the floor pans (poorly I might add), and try to fix one of the rusty fender bottoms.
              Travis
              '66 IIa 88

              Comment

              • Dashface
                Low Range
                • Nov 2007
                • 66

                #22
                Thanks for all the help everyone - I'm very impressed.

                I called our hosts today and was told rather shortly that they do not have any door post bits for Series II trucks at this time. I am a little sad that the appropriate peices aren't available anymore.

                I think I'm just going to have a local shop cut out around the captive nuts and weld in a new plate with new nuts welded to that. There should be enough metal here and there to anchor it.

                Thixon, I know what you mean about shop costs for body work. I haven't bothered to bring my MG in anywhere because I don't want to know how much they'll ask. Then again, grinding out some bubbles is a bit different than fabricating a chunk of metal.

                An old friend's boyfriend does work at an aluminum fabricating shop though... Maybe I should get him to rig me up some new bits

                Comment

                • daveb
                  5th Gear
                  • Nov 2006
                  • 513

                  #23
                  there is really nothing unique about doorposts between SII and SIII, they are the same. If you get the RN repair piece that covers the upper corner, it has a square hole in between the two round holes. there are new-style captive nuts that slip in and clip onto the edge of the square hole. the nut portion of it is then visible through the round hole. that patch piece will also cover the are where you have rust penetration.

                  disregard the comments by another poster saying those patch pieces are only a temporary fix and that they just go on top of the old metal. that is 100% incorrect, you must cut away all the corroded metal and then weld in new. the bottom of the doorpost underneath the lower hinge looks like it has been filled with bondo. that needs to be removed and a patch of 18 or 29 gauge metal properly welded in. you may find that the foot of the bulkhead that mounts to the chssis outrugger is going to, that is a more involved repair but some cleaning, paint and waxoyl should help if it isn't too far gone yet.

                  these repairs done properly should last as long as the rest of the bulkhead as long as proper corrosion protection measures are taken during and after the work, and over the life of the car.

                  there is good information here but do your own research and don't believe everything you read on the internet.
                  A Land Rover would never turn up to collect an Oscar. It'd be far too busy doing something important, somewhere, for someone."


                  Comment

                  • Dashface
                    Low Range
                    • Nov 2007
                    • 66

                    #24
                    Thanks for the info, Daveb. I was kind of figuring I could get by with the corner replacement patches from our hosts. I think I may give that a try - apparently I could then use the correct captive nuts, etc...

                    ...Of course, I don't know which ones those are, but I'll try and sort it out.

                    Comment

                    • SafeAirOne
                      Overdrive
                      • Apr 2008
                      • 3435

                      #25
                      Originally posted by daveb
                      ...disregard the comments by another poster saying those patch pieces are only a temporary fix and that they just go on top of the old metal. that is 100% incorrect, you must cut away all the corroded metal and then weld in new...

                      Are you saying that the pictured piece doesn't just fit over the old, lousy bulkhead piece and get welded over it as a patch? I suppose I could be 100% incorrect on that...The 2 things compelling me to call it a weld-over patch is:

                      1) That's the way a PO did it on mine (of course we all know about previous owners...) and

                      2) The doorpost metal is much thicker than the corner patch (at least the patch that the PO used on mine). Maybe the corner patches RN sells are really thick ones??

                      If you cut away the doorpost where the upper hinge holes are and replace it with this metal patch, I don't think there will be enough rigidity/structure. As I recall, the replacement doorpost is much thicker than the surrounding sheet steel and is stamped in an L or a C-channel shape, making it very rigid in the area of the uppper hinge. Please note that these are just my observations from the bulkhead restoration I completed a couple years ago. I had much more corrosion than the RN corner patch would cover, so I ended up fabricating the entire upper corners of my bulkhead and the vent seal channels from scratch and used the tall doorpost replacements from RN. I've never examined the RN corner replacements personally, but am going by the similar patches that were attached to my bulkhead by the PO.

                      Now the doorpost is definitely a remove-and-replace item.
                      --Mark

                      1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel

                      0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
                      (9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).

                      Comment

                      • daveb
                        5th Gear
                        • Nov 2006
                        • 513

                        #26
                        Mark

                        In my experience bulkheads are mostly 18 or 19 gauge metal. Not the thickest material. The strength in that area comes from the shape not from the thickness of the metal. Adding metal over a rusted area does nothing for longevity and the added strength will soon be lost as the cancer in the metal underneath continues to spread. Best to cut out all the rust and weld in a new patch. Properly done it should have all the strength of the original. Have seen, in fact I own one, several bulkheads where the repair was done as you describe. This causes problems with fitting the captive nuts over the multiple layers of metal and just makes a proper repair more difficult down the road as now the new patch has to be cut away as well necessitating more extensive repairs than that originally required. Less work to do it right the first time...a lesson I repeatedly teach myself
                        A Land Rover would never turn up to collect an Oscar. It'd be far too busy doing something important, somewhere, for someone."


                        Comment

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