Fiberglass floors (was: Re: mail Digest for 8 Dec 2004 in hour 0:00 (fi
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Fiberglass floors (was: Re: mail Digest for 8 Dec 2004 in hour 0:00 (fiberglass floors))
- From: Matt Haas <mhaas@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 08 Dec 2004 22:24:37 -0500
Frank,
Okay, so cutting out the entire front floor was taking things a little far
but...
What was gone on my car was the "foot well" area. It was better than 80%
gone on both sides (more like 90% gone on the driver's side) and I can tell
you first hand that the car flexed a lot. It flexed so much, in fact, that
you couldn't open or close the front doors if the car was jacked up. Just
replacing the drivers side made a tremendous difference in the way the car
rode and drove. I really wasn't kidding about have to use a floor jack to
put the frame sill in the proper place when I fixed the floors in the car
(BTW, this is a reference to an article I recently wrote for AIM). just
from the "foot well" area being gone, it allowed the frame sill (and the
floor pan it was attached to) to sag. The part of the pan under the seat
was in good shape but the thing is that the foot well helps support that
part of the floor (it's that whole unitized construction thing -- body
strength is gotten from all of the components working together -- none of
the are strong by themselves) and without the support from that thin piece
of metal, it just sagged.
The problem with using fiberglass to fix the floors is that the car's flex
quite a bit. Even when they were brand spanking new, they flexed quite a
bit (especially compared to today's cars). Fiberglass just can't take the
flexing which is why Corvettes don't have fiberglass floors anymore and use
a massive steel frame. You can bend steel quite a bit before it will crack
to the point of failure but fiberglass isn't so forgiving. I'm not going to
argue that fiberglass is weak compared to steel (it isn't when done
properly) but it's just the wrong material for this application.
Also, the method you mentioned below does nothing to even attempt to
stabilize the frame sills. Those have to be attached to something with some
strength and rusty sheet metal ain't strong.
Matt
At 09:24 AM 12/8/2004 +0000, you wrote:
Okay, I should be more precise -- I really just meant the floor pans or
foot wells, the most commonly rusted pieces, not the ENTIRE floor! I
didn't think the post would have referred to the entire floor either, so I
didn't elaborate much. The bracing under the floor is strategically
located for strength and stiffness of the entire structure. I didn't mean
that you could cut the entire floor out and replace with fiberglass, but
fiberglass is a good repair for rusted floors. There should be over 50% of
the metal still there. That will serve as a reinforcement for the
fiberglass. Other than that, clean it real good (no need to cut it out,
even if it looks like swiss cheese after cleaning), prime, paint (to seal
away moisture and air), then 'glass over on top and seal the bottom with a
good undercoating. There will never be any rust and it will be as strong
or stronger than the original floor. As far as tensile strength goes the
fiberglass should be as strong or stronger than st!
eel. It doesn't have as much compression strength or stiffness. That's
why there is usually reinforcement built into boat and such. Take a look
at a concrete bridge. Darn concrete is strong!! Now take a look at a
bridge being built. Never knew there was so much steel bar in there did
you!! To make the entire floor from fiberglass would require some steel
reinforcement, but it should be safe to replace most of the large flat
unbraced areas with fiberglass. Yes, I guess I'm back pedaling a bit
here!! Should have been more detailed the first time.. (spitting foot out
now!!)
One of Datson's tricks was to add about 1/4" of fiberglass mat and resin
to a perfectly good steel floor to stiffen the entire floor structure of a
car for road racing. Adds a little weight, but apparently stiffened enough
to be worth it.
--
Frank Swygert
Publisher, "American Independent
Magazine" (AIM)
For all AMC enthusiasts
http//:farna.home.att.net/AIM.html
(free download available!)
-------------- Original message ----------------------
> Date: Tue, 07 Dec 2004 20:52:17 -0500
> To: mail@xxxxxxxxxxxx
> From: Matt Haas <mhaas@xxxxxxx>
> Subject: Re: mail Digest for 6 Dec 2004 in hour 0:00
>
> <snip>
> >The fiberglass remark is unwarranted though. You obviously don't
> >understand the strength of fiberglass! There are entire boat hulls made
> >from it with minimal wood bracing embedded inside, why wouldn't it serve
> >as a floor? Car floors aren't really a structural member. Sure they help
> <snip>
>
> As someone who drove a car with no front floors to speak of, all I can say
> to this is bull hooey and I invite you to chop them out and see how well
> the car does. Of course, I'm not sure how you'd drive it since the seats
> mount to the floor but I'd bet you'll be pretty unhappy when the car caves
> in on itself after you hit your first hard bump (the frame sills attach to
> the floor also). The simple fact is that on any car, the floor is just as
> important to the structure as the roof or the sides. In fact, anything
that
> isn't bolted on is a structural part of the car (on my 1996 Ram, even the
> windshield is a structural part). Do some parts contribute more than
other?
> Sure, but the floors contribute a bunch more than you think.
>
> And yes, entire boats are made of fiberglass but you don't see large flat
> sections of fiberglass that don't have reinforcements. Corvettes? The
early
> ones crack badly due to body flex (and older cars flex a lot more than
> newer ones) and had full perimeter frames. The newer ones have a huge
steel
> frame under them and the body is mostly for looks and aerodynamics. Take a
> look at http://www.mattsoldcars.com/gallery/PowerTour2003/page6.shtml
for a
> picture of a previous generation (C5) Corvette frame looks like.
>
>
> mhaas@xxxxxxx
> Cincinnati, OH
> http://www.mattsoldcars.com
> 1966 Rambler Rebel
> 1968 Rambler American sedan
mhaas@xxxxxxx
Cincinnati, OH
http://www.mattsoldcars.com
1966 Rambler Rebel
1968 Rambler American sedan
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