From there everything looked good. Had to get some more tube in and some tie-ins to the outer tubes. Then move onto skinning the truck.
I used aluminum for the skins. I'm not a great body and paint guy, or sheetmetal guy, by any means. I figured though if it was weathertight and gave enough room for stuff I'd be happy.
Here is the finished product. This turned into a serious endeavor for the seam sealing. I used a 3m 2-part seam sealer that had a fixture time of 5 minutes.
That 5 minutes was ridiculous. It also was a mixing nozzle, so if I was getting clsoe to 5 minutes I had to squirt the gun or I'd risk screwing myself.
The idea here is that if I junk a panel I can replace it, but not nearly as easy as straight up skins. The seam sealer does however make this whole thing not nearly as loud as I'd thought it would be.
I used aluminum for the skins. I'm not a great body and paint guy, or sheetmetal guy, by any means. I figured though if it was weathertight and gave enough room for stuff I'd be happy.
Here is the finished product. This turned into a serious endeavor for the seam sealing. I used a 3m 2-part seam sealer that had a fixture time of 5 minutes.
That 5 minutes was ridiculous. It also was a mixing nozzle, so if I was getting clsoe to 5 minutes I had to squirt the gun or I'd risk screwing myself.
The idea here is that if I junk a panel I can replace it, but not nearly as easy as straight up skins. The seam sealer does however make this whole thing not nearly as loud as I'd thought it would be.

