All good info, thanks; but I already planned the baseline for the requested measurements, not off of being level, but off of the factory body lines themselves. For example, I laid a stick on the roof and then brought that line forward to the rad support. So the car can be on a hill and I'd still get the same dimension. The same with the other two measurements too. For the cowl line and rocker line, I wasn't leveling anything, I was only continuing the factory lines forward! So all these lines should be the same on all cars, especially since the factory manual says that tolerances of 1/4" is ok.
Right, but a "stick on the roof" isn't an accurately repeatable measurement. You're pulling a straight line off of a curve and measuring a distance with an angle on it. You have no way of knowing if that "stick" is level, and if it's not the measurement won't be repeatable. If I do the same thing but the stick is got a tiny bit more angle on it, the measurement will be totally different. And, oh yeah, the factory didn't tolerance the radiator support that well.
There's a reason why the factory chassis measurements are taken the way that they are. They are all based off of square, level surfaces so that they can be accurately reproduced. You have to be able to set up the reference points, otherwise the measurements are meaningless.
And just because the factory said the body measurements were within a 1/4", well, good luck with that. They aren't. Even if they were, the body lines being right doesn't necessarily mean your suspension points will be, and the suspension points being right is all that matters. The bottom of the radiator support that you use as a reference could be different by a 1/2" and it would effect nothing. The factory doesn't use it as a reference because it wasn't held to a strict tolerance.
And even if they did, how are you measuring that? The rockers are wider than the radiator support. So you're projecting a line forward, using an imaginary point, and then shooting a measurement line off of an imaginary point over to the bottom of the rocker? You've got no way to square that imaginary reference point, so, if any of the angles are a fraction off the measurement is useless.
I admire your desire to rebuild some absolutely beyond reason, but you are going to have serious problems if you dont at least put that thing on a flat concrete pad. You CANNOT do what your attempting on dirt with cinder blocks for jack stands. You probably have allready welded twist into the chassis by welding your rockers on with it sitting like that.
Agree 100%. It would be one thing to change a single frame rail or other component like that, at least you have the rest of the car to use as a reference. Not best practice, but at least reasonable. But with that car he's got no reference points. None. Too much metal missing already. That means the references would have to come off a known surface (frame table, or yeah, at least flat concrete) to get accurate locations. Clearly our guy hasn't done any drafting, machining, construction, etc where you have to use dimensions established off a known reference point.
Well I jacked it up like that, welded the brace in the door frame, took some measurements, and the replaced the rocker. And the door frame geometry didn't move at all. I'm going to test fit the door today. With 1/4" factory tolerance I think it will be ok.
Right, except you could have moved the entire door frame up a 1/4" and the door would still fit. But now the rockers in the wrong place. Just because the roof line stayed the same shape doesn't mean it didn't move, not with the amount of structure missing from that car. You can stick the door on a fully assembled car if you jack up the front corner on one side only, there's too much flex even in a complete car for measurements like that to be accurate.
I'm only one of a long lineage of shade tree mechanics that have been repairing cars in the dirt for a hundred years and ending with a good result. Sure, I'd love to have a frame jig and 60,000 square foot garage with a shiny floor, heat, and six lifts like some forum members have, but that isn't going to happen in this lifetime.
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Look, I've done lots of work in the dirt, or in my backyard, or on a driveway that is most decidedly not flat. And that's fine,
MOST of the time. When you do chassis work, you MUST have references that you can repeatedly measure accurately. If you replace one frame rail, you can do it in the dirt, level the chassis and use the rest of the chassis as your reference and measure one spot on the ground etc. and it will work well enough. Not ideal but you can make it work.
You have ZERO reference points with the body you have there. None. Nothing on that car can be trusted to be in the right spot. Which means you MUST have a known reference to establish the chassis measurements in the FSM, bare minimum. You don't need a 60,000 sq foot shop with lifts, but you do need at least a flat section of concrete large enough to hold that car so you can drop plumb lines and set your references to establish that "o-line".
Hell, I supposed you could frame up a "floor" with 2x4's and secure it on your ground surface there, and set that up so it's level and square like they do a raised foundation house or shed. Basically use that as a frame table, it wouldn't hold the chassis but as long as it was square and level you could use it to drop plumb lines to. Not how I would do it but at least you'd have half a chance at having some reference points.