Summer doors

That Guy

Member
Made some more progress on my summer doors this weekend.



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Here's some more pix of what I started with and what's been done so far.

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Made some hammer forms out of some scrap lumber

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Here's the flange folded over after the hammer form and some dolly work.

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The whole door flanged

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I also cut this out to use on the summer doors, more on that later, it will be cool.

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the doors are gonna be sweet! Put me in for a set!
-Joe

As soon as I finish these I'll have a better estimate of how long it takes and an idea of how much it would cost.

(there's a set of doors on craigslist for $150 in willow glen, comes with a hood too.)
 
Your really going for it bending over the edge like that. Nice work.

I just end welded mine a ground it smooth. Work for me, but they where wheeling doors, so a little warpage wasn't a big deal. I also did them quickly, so again, a little wavy didn't bother me.

Truth be told they were windier down the road than no doors, but they where nice. Make some slip on or snap on covers for them and they will be much more weather friendly :cornut:
 
Did some more work tonight
first, as always, you make a pattern
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Then, using the "wheel of death", cut out your part.
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Here it is with all the panels welded in, notice the little recess in the flat part? That's for the relocated inner door handle. I had to consider the boss and kids. I wanted to make it easier than having to reach back and open the door by the outside handle.
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It sticks out more than I thought it would so I'm going to cut it back out and recess it more so it's lower and almost flush with the door.
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I was thinking the same thing about the snap on cover mine are pretty open. Good post I like ur design a lot better
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Looks great!:thumbsup: I thought about relocating the inside latch. But in the end just went with the outside one.
 
I decided to switch gears and mount the left side door but noticed it was kind of wobbly because the bracing had fatigue cracks.
The only way to fix it was to cut part of it out for access.
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I May fill in the speaker hole while I'm here, we'll see.
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So I blasted the area and found it worse than I thought. It seemed like it was one large crack that I could just clean and weld up, but nooo, not so easy. This is what I found after blasting.
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Good thing I have this little helper in the shop
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You probably know the routine by now, cut out the bad stuff
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Make the pattern and draw the part on the metal. Cut it out with the wod (wheel of death) bla bla bla
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After breaking it into shape, test fitting and adjusting it becomes a suitable replacement part.
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Then I welded some nuts on the back instead of trying to save the original threaded plates.
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Well, long story short, weld it in place. And spray some paint on it.
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Then I put the part that was cut out back on, plus a piece to fill in where the speaker hole was hacked out.
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That just shows how you can never assume anything with your project. This "little crack" that had to be fixed took more than 5 hours to fix. Doing metal work properly cannot be skipped and still end up with a quality job. And people wonder why paint jobs cost many thousands of dollars.

Before
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And after.
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Back on to the door handle, I made a 3/4" spacer to weld in and recess the handle.
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That's better, now it doesn't stick out so far.
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Next, I made a pattern for the trim piece because seeing that hole right in the middle was kinda ugly.
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Here's the pattern laid out flat and traced on the 18ga.

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So far so good except that the spring sticks out farther than where I want the trim to sit.

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A little dimple with a socket and the press gives me just enough room for the spring.

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After mounting the door I realized that the upper hinge brace had fatigue cracks too. I should have expected that because the lower one was so bad. I'll have to cut that out and repair it now too.

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