Saw the last 2 pictures when the page loaded and got confused. Thought I had loaded a thread in which someone was building a battle axe or something! LOL
Saw the last 2 pictures when the page loaded and got confused. Thought I had loaded a thread in which someone was building a battle axe or something! LOL






Yeah I wasn't sure how many would get that reference.Klingon "battlef" maybe? Haha.

His rendition is quite a bit nicer than mine. Looks killer.Z71paramedic made some header brackets just like that a few years ago. I bought one and love it. It was nice to eliminate those holes.
His rendition is quite a bit nicer than mine. Looks killer.








Update 05/03/2016:
Can't bolt a top onto a rusted out windshield frame so started peeling the onion...
Windshield came out easy enough once I cut the rubber seal out.
Yup, there it is...
Next layer.
And another
Looks like there's one more layer of swiss cheese in there to remove and then I'll have to plan on a good way to handle all the rust on the inside I won't be able to remove.
Anyone suggest better option than this: My plan is to spray either phosphoric or muriatic acid up in the hollow sections followed by thorough rinse and probably the Eastwood rust converter with the long hose to reach all the crevices. Might want to use a chassis sealer on top of that.

That general method worked for me. After patching the rotted portions, I used the Eastwood rust converter and encapsulator (with the long tube) on the inside of my Charger's front frame. I used 2 whole cans over several sessions hoping I coated everything evenly. The nozzle doesn't spray cleanly and the paint is thin and tends to run.Anyone suggest better option than this: My plan is to spray either phosphoric or muriatic acid up in the hollow sections followed by thorough rinse and probably the Eastwood rust converter with the long hose to reach all the crevices. Might want to use a chassis sealer on top of that.
No idea what the best method will be.... But the windshield frame is one the the last vestiges of hidden rust on my truck and I'd like to figure out a good way to get inside the entire frame to remove / seal out the rust for good.
Maybe there's a way to coax a long-handled brush into the uprights and across the bottom now that you've cut an access hole? Something that could hold an acid-based converter (OSPHO type deal)???
-G
That general method worked for me. After patching the rotted portions, I used the Eastwood rust converter and encapsulator (with the long tube) on the inside of my Charger's front frame. I used 2 whole cans over several sessions hoping I coated everything evenly. The nozzle doesn't spray cleanly and the paint is thin and tends to run.




















Cool! I'm impressed by the krud cutter. I may have to pick some up.
Thanks for sharing your experiments.