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Front passenger corner of the chassis is brittle (car originally came from East coast). I noticed that the hole on the frame has become larger than factory and the chassis is splitting at the seam.
Because of this I have been hesitant to drive the car. How bad is this and how much work would be required to make it safe? Is it possible for the frame to split and crack all the way around if I need driving it?
I understand. I am wondering if it should not be driven at all? Is there anyway to replace this section or is it too far gone?
Yes, but it will require some good welding skills. You would need to go over the frame from front to back and see what the rest of the frame looks like. Chances are that is not the only area and it's best to just replace the frame.
New frame time.
Or at minimum a lot of cutting and welding...in which case youd be farther ahead with a new tube frame or good used OEM.
Not safe at all. What's the rest of the car like?
I’m afraid that that is beyond repair, for the sake of your family and fellow motorists you’ll need to replace the frame in order to continue to enjoy without structural anxiety. The cracks are not the core problem, the thinning corrosion compounds the issue and becomes a liability on your part.
Last edited by oldcutlass; Dec 18, 2023 at 07:12 PM.
Reason: duplicate
This was one option I am looking into, any insight on quality or accuracy of the components is greatly appreciated! Mark T
By the time you buy all the components to fix this frame, and hire a good welder to fix it.
You will have been better off buying a good used frame from the dry southwest, and have it shipped to you.
If a new frame, OEM or otherwise, is in your future make sure it's straight before you begin. Coat the inside with Eastwoods inner frame paint process or an oil-based corrosion-resistant product...Krown, LPS, Corrosion Free etc...
I see a lot of guys restore a frame and then discover it doesn't line up because it's tweaked so have it checked for square before you begin assembly. A tweaked frame can be fixed on a good jig with knowledgeable tech.