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    Results 1 to 15 of 15
    1. #1
      Join Date
      Feb 2012
      Location
      Mocksville, NC
      Posts
      331
      Country Flag: United States

      K member frame bolt hole repair

      So my tubular K member decided to take a crap and when it did, one of my bolt hole mounts got bent. I drop the member and the hole is now cocked and concaved and the nutsert broke loose. Is there a tool like a slide hammer that will go into a 1” hole, secure itself on the wall and then I can beat it out? The frame is boxed and is a unibody and I only have access through the 1” hole. Any help is appreciated.
      1968 Charger R/T, EFI,SC,6-speed

    2. #2
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      kitchener,Ontario,Canada
      Posts
      2,336
      Country Flag: Canada
      Pics would help , sorry not a big mopar guy to know what you're referring to
      Spinnin'my tires in life's fast lane

      Ryan Austin
      On twitter @raustinss
      On Instagram austinss70

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Feb 2012
      Location
      Mocksville, NC
      Posts
      331
      Country Flag: United States
      Here’s a pic.
      Attached Images Attached Images  
      1968 Charger R/T, EFI,SC,6-speed

    4. #4
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      kitchener,Ontario,Canada
      Posts
      2,336
      Country Flag: Canada
      Not sure if you want to but I'd cut a hole in the side to access it , reweld it then weld the access hole closed again
      Spinnin'my tires in life's fast lane

      Ryan Austin
      On twitter @raustinss
      On Instagram austinss70

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Jun 2020
      Location
      Denver
      Posts
      21
      Do they make rivnuts that big. If they do it’s a pretty easy fix.

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Feb 2012
      Location
      Mocksville, NC
      Posts
      331
      Country Flag: United States
      I've found some in that size but the 1" hole in my frame is too big for the rivet. Plus to compress a rivet of that size would require me to have Hulk strength so I was told.
      1968 Charger R/T, EFI,SC,6-speed

    7. #7
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      kitchener,Ontario,Canada
      Posts
      2,336
      Country Flag: Canada
      Also not sure youd want a subframe being held on by rivnut
      Spinnin'my tires in life's fast lane

      Ryan Austin
      On twitter @raustinss
      On Instagram austinss70

    8. #8
      Join Date
      Feb 2012
      Location
      Mocksville, NC
      Posts
      331
      Country Flag: United States
      It’s a Dodge unibody so everything is tied in. Granted the nutsert would be the weakest link between the other 3 bolts, I don’t think it would be that bad. When the k member welds failed it did damage to that one area.

      1968 Charger R/T, EFI,SC,6-speed


    9. #9
      Join Date
      Sep 2007
      Posts
      424
      What's the story on the tubular K-frame crapping? What happened? What brand was it?

    10. #10
      Join Date
      Feb 2012
      Location
      Mocksville, NC
      Posts
      331
      Country Flag: United States
      This was a complete setup from Magnumforce Racing. Came with tubular k frame, upper and lower a-arms, rack and pinion, spindles, 13” Wilwoods and coilover shocks. I was told this was good for the street and drag racing. I make a 3mph turn around in a parking lot and the weld snaps and the car drops the driver side. Since this design is 15 years old, they don’t have any replacement k members so I have to buy a whole new setup. And I mean nothing will bolt on to the newer stuff. 2020 can kiss my ass!!
      1968 Charger R/T, EFI,SC,6-speed

    11. #11
      Join Date
      Jun 2020
      Location
      Denver
      Posts
      21
      What about through bolting all the way through the frame. I’m just thinking how to fix this without cutting a piece out of the frame to straighten it and weld a nut in there and then reweld the pieces back in.

    12. #12
      Join Date
      Feb 2012
      Location
      Mocksville, NC
      Posts
      331
      Country Flag: United States
      Interesting. Didn’t think of that. Thanks for the input brother.
      1968 Charger R/T, EFI,SC,6-speed

    13. #13
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      kitchener,Ontario,Canada
      Posts
      2,336
      Country Flag: Canada
      If you go that route you're going to want to "sleeve" the hole by welding in a DOM piece of tubing so you could tighten the bolt without crushing aka collapsing the original rail
      Spinnin'my tires in life's fast lane

      Ryan Austin
      On twitter @raustinss
      On Instagram austinss70

    14. #14
      Join Date
      Feb 2012
      Location
      Mocksville, NC
      Posts
      331
      Country Flag: United States
      Oh yeah definitely. Good thing I work in a machine shop.
      1968 Charger R/T, EFI,SC,6-speed

    15. #15
      Join Date
      May 2010
      Location
      kitchener,Ontario,Canada
      Posts
      2,336
      Country Flag: Canada
      Lol ...love when you have the skills and the material , good luck
      Spinnin'my tires in life's fast lane

      Ryan Austin
      On twitter @raustinss
      On Instagram austinss70





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