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    Results 1 to 16 of 16
    1. #1
      Join Date
      Mar 2007
      Posts
      9

      Smoothing Bumpers

      Anyone converted their bumpers into a smoothed and filled look. I was considering welding up the bumper bolts and other holes and then rechroming. Anyone done this? I am looking for some helpful tips. Do you have to strip all of the chrome first? Anything that will make this easier?:bsjerk:

      1966 Charger, 452CID Stroker, TCI 727, 3.91, Fatman 2" Drop Spindles, 18" Torq Thrust


    2. #2
      Join Date
      Oct 2008
      Location
      Durham,NC
      Posts
      664
      Country Flag: United States
      What are you going to use for filler to handle the chroming process if I might ask?

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Dec 2006
      Location
      Out of the Burbs of Detroit to SoCal, then onto my ancestral homeland, the woods of Cascadia
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      I'm guessing welding wire. Cut the head off the carraige bolt and weld it in the square hole, fill imperfections w/ the wire feed
      Greg Fast
      (yes, the last name is spelled correctly)

      1970 Camaro RS Clone
      1984 el Camino
      1973 MGB vintage E/Prod race car
      (Soon to be an SCCA H/Prod limited prep)

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Sep 2006
      Location
      Indiana
      Posts
      2,670
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      The front and rear bumpers on my El Camino are smooth.

      Herb

      1966 El Camino LS408/T56Magnum
      1966 Chevelle 509/T56Magnum
      1963 C10 454/4L80

      PHR CHP CHP youtube


    5. #5
      Join Date
      Oct 2008
      Location
      Durham,NC
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      664
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      Now if you where powder coating I would say you could use all metal filler correct?

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Oct 2008
      Location
      Durham,NC
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      664
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      Damn that is sexy!

    7. #7
      Join Date
      Aug 2003
      Location
      Orlando, FL
      Posts
      8,745
      I thnk this is exactly what your looking for. We just finished some on a car we JUST finished. have not even shown pics yet, but here is a sneak peak.

      We use threaded rod, fillit welded through the bumper bolt hole, and then braced the back side of the stud with a piece of 11 gauge about 3" long with a hole in it for the bolt to beef up that area so the stud did not pull on only the the stud itself.

      We did not strip them first, we ground back the chrome, then sent them to the chrome shop for final blocking and chroming. The entire deal was a $1200 process! Expensive, but freakin cool for sure

      Enjoy



    8. #8
      Join Date
      Feb 2008
      Posts
      229
      like this?
      Attached Images Attached Images    

    9. #9
      Join Date
      Sep 2006
      Location
      Indiana
      Posts
      2,670
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      Quote Originally Posted by Twentyover View Post
      I'm guessing welding wire. Cut the head off the carraige bolt and weld it in the square hole, fill imperfections w/ the wire feed
      That's similar to how my bumpers were done, but I found out after the fact the best way to do it is to weld a 1" x 1" square plate over each bolt hole on the back side of the bumper. Drill and tap each plate for a stud, then fill in the bolt hole with weld (welding the stud in place in the process). Of course you'll need to do a quality job welding/filling the bolt holes for a smooth finish before chrome plating.

      If you just weld a stud into the bolt holes, as you tighten the bumper to the brackets, there's a chance the stud will pull the bumper in creating a valley. There's a very slight valley on one of the bolt/stud locations on my rear bumper because of this.
      Herb

      1966 El Camino LS408/T56Magnum
      1966 Chevelle 509/T56Magnum
      1963 C10 454/4L80

      PHR CHP CHP youtube


    10. #10
      Join Date
      Oct 2008
      Location
      Durham,NC
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      Can all metal body filler with stand power coat?

    11. #11
      Join Date
      Dec 2006
      Location
      Out of the Burbs of Detroit to SoCal, then onto my ancestral homeland, the woods of Cascadia
      Posts
      1,753
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      Quote Originally Posted by Yelcamino View Post
      That's similar to how my bumpers were done, but I found out after the fact the best way to do it is to weld a 1" x 1" square plate over each bolt hole on the back side of the bumper. Drill and tap each plate for a stud, then fill in the bolt hole with weld (welding the stud in place in the process). Of course you'll need to do a quality job welding/filling the bolt holes for a smooth finish before chrome plating.

      If you just weld a stud into the bolt holes, as you tighten the bumper to the brackets, there's a chance the stud will pull the bumper in creating a valley. There's a very slight valley on one of the bolt/stud locations on my rear bumper because of this.
      Point taken
      Greg Fast
      (yes, the last name is spelled correctly)

      1970 Camaro RS Clone
      1984 el Camino
      1973 MGB vintage E/Prod race car
      (Soon to be an SCCA H/Prod limited prep)

    12. #12
      Join Date
      Dec 2006
      Location
      Out of the Burbs of Detroit to SoCal, then onto my ancestral homeland, the woods of Cascadia
      Posts
      1,753
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      Quote Originally Posted by brans72 View Post
      Can all metal body filler with stand power coat?

      Don't KNOW, but I doubt it. Lead melts at 620F, powder generally sets at 450F
      Greg Fast
      (yes, the last name is spelled correctly)

      1970 Camaro RS Clone
      1984 el Camino
      1973 MGB vintage E/Prod race car
      (Soon to be an SCCA H/Prod limited prep)

    13. #13
      Join Date
      Mar 2007
      Posts
      9
      Quote Originally Posted by Yelcamino View Post
      That's similar to how my bumpers were done, but I found out after the fact the best way to do it is to weld a 1" x 1" square plate over each bolt hole on the back side of the bumper. Drill and tap each plate for a stud, then fill in the bolt hole with weld (welding the stud in place in the process). Of course you'll need to do a quality job welding/filling the bolt holes for a smooth finish before chrome plating.

      If you just weld a stud into the bolt holes, as you tighten the bumper to the brackets, there's a chance the stud will pull the bumper in creating a valley. There's a very slight valley on one of the bolt/stud locations on my rear bumper because of this.
      That is eactly the kind of tip I was looking for. I was not sure about the best way. I have seen the dimpled bumpers caused by the incorrect method. A large steel on the back side of the bumper to spread the bolting force out, thats smart. I guess I will experiment to get the best fit for my application. I want to close the bumper up to the body a little also so I am going to be "customizing" the bumper brackets as well. Thanks again.
      1966 Charger, 452CID Stroker, TCI 727, 3.91, Fatman 2" Drop Spindles, 18" Torq Thrust

    14. #14
      Join Date
      Aug 2004
      Location
      Melbourne, FL
      Posts
      1,046
      Country Flag: United States
      Could you use lead/lead-free solder to fill the hole or would it soften too much from any heat generated during chroming??
      67 Firebird Convert 455 +.060 Johnny Winters TH400 74cc KRE d-port flowed @ 310 cfm heads piston dished 16cc H-beam rods Comp Cam 305-AH-8 cam 108* LSA 253/260 @.050 duration .577/.594 lift w/1.65 rockers Ford 9" 3.55 Detroit Locker M/T Sportsman Radials 31x18x15 on Convo Pro 15x15s

      Honest dad that 455 on the side of the block is a serial number

    15. #15
      Join Date
      Mar 2005
      Location
      Miamisburg, Oh
      Posts
      2,396
      I am sooo feeling that yellow 69..... I want to see more pics!

      FWIW - TheMisfitKing - I was going to do this with my rear bumper as well, but I'm balking a little at the price of the re-chroming process. I don't think I've heard a number less than 600-800 yet and mine has a little kink in it that needs straightened.
      69 RS
      LS7, T56 and other cool stuff
      Back on track in late 2020!
      Build Thread

    16. #16
      Join Date
      Sep 2006
      Location
      Indiana
      Posts
      2,670
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      Quote Originally Posted by BA. View Post
      I am sooo feeling that yellow 69..... I want to see more pics!

      FWIW - TheMisfitKing - I was going to do this with my rear bumper as well, but I'm balking a little at the price of the re-chroming process. I don't think I've heard a number less than 600-800 yet and mine has a little kink in it that needs straightened.
      Give Tri-City Plating a call. I got an original pair for my Chevelle from them for about $600. If you just need yours rechromed it should be considerably cheaper...

      http://www.tricityplating.com/
      Herb

      1966 El Camino LS408/T56Magnum
      1966 Chevelle 509/T56Magnum
      1963 C10 454/4L80

      PHR CHP CHP youtube





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