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Re: Body Tools

To: Charles Lattimer <lattimer@tenet.edu>
Subject: Re: Body Tools
From: "Michael D. Porter" <mdporter@rt66.com>
Date: Sat, 12 Apr 1997 08:33:57 -0700
Cc: triumphs@Autox.Team.Net
Organization: None whatsoever
References: <Pine.OSF.3.91.970411222620.29577B-100000@beall.tenet.edu>
Charles Lattimer wrote:
> 
> Greetings,
>     I am planning to buy a set of basic body tools and was wondering
> if it's really worth paying $30 for a dolly from Eastwood when you
> can buy a complete set from JC Whitney for less than $20.  I know
> that you usually get what you pay for, but is a machined chunk of
> steel really worth $30?

I suppose this depends upon what sort of body work you intend to do, and
how much you have done in the past, Chuck. If you plan to do a lot of
it, and have the skills, good tools are a help. What you'll find with
the JC Whitney tools is that the hammers are useless--soft wood in the
handles and brads to hold the heads on--and the finish on the dollies
will be rough. If you take the time to do a little sanding and polishing
on the cheap dollies, you'll minimize transferring scratches to the body
metal. The one tool I would strongly recommend that you buy the best you
can is a shrinking hammer. Get a really good rawhide hammer for that.
There are cheaper ones with a rubber head with a bonded-on patterned
head, and they work, but make a mess of the surface of the metal (been
there, done that <g>). 

If you want a really good dissertation on metalworking tools, get Ron
Fourtier's "Metal Fabrication Handbook." I think it's published by HP.
Very good book, with a good section on body and fabrication tools.

Cheers. 

-- 
My other Triumph doesn't run, either....

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