Bandolero
Well-Known Member
I think it’s mostly the guys up North who are used to Salt eating perfectly good vehicles. Down south we drive trucks from the 70s that are barely starting to patina.I don’t understand why people freak out about this. The body is full of holes. The cab has huge holes in the floor. Mud, which is basically blasting grit, from water crossings, gets caked all over the underside of the truck around these factory holes. In 120k miles I had zero corrosion issues on my TJs ARB sliders. I do pressure wash the underside of my truck when I go through mud, along with the brakes and engine bay. A lot of people never do that despite all of those scary HOLES everywhere. Aaahhhhhh!!!
Measure twice and cut once unless you’re OCD, in which case you measure 15 times. Also, drill 1 hole, insert the rivnut, mount the panel and use that 1 correct hole to align the rest of the holes. Use the panel as a drill guide for pilot holes and enlarge to rivnut size. Easy. You deburr the holes, paint, and optionally RTV the rivnut.
Meanwhile the factory has created all sorts of pockets around pinch seams that trap mud and debris and promote body cancer. The lower back side of the body front fender opening for example. Then people happily drill holes in their frame, the one place where you can’t cut out the rust and rivet in new material and fill with bondo. You can easily cut out and replace an entire rocker panel on a body-on-frame vehicle. But I’ve never seen one of these types of rocker guards cause problems if they were done correctly.
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