02-10-2023, 11:56 AM | #1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2018
Location: Arkansas
Posts: 525
|
56 door panels
How do you make door panels if you do not have the old ones for a template? I have them ruffed out in cardboard but have no idea where to put the holes for the attachment clips. I know they are offset but do not know where or how many there are. Is there a diagram somewhere showing where these clips are located. Thanks
|
02-10-2023, 04:17 PM | #2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: westbury ny
Posts: 854
|
Re: 56 door panels
there should be holes punched in the door punch them through and center the clip with the offset in the direction it needs to be might want to use something lighter to rough it out then transfer to cardboard start at the top tape it to the door this way you can get the window crank and door handle markings you can dab some grease to get the marks on the paper
|
Sponsored Links (Register now to hide all advertisements) |
|
02-10-2023, 06:40 PM | #3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Granite City, Illinois
Posts: 3,008
|
Re: 56 door panels
If unable to obtain 3/32" thick Masonite, you can get 1/8" thick Masonite at most hardware stores. Cutting to fit your door pattern can be done using a jigsaw and fine plywood cutting blade.
For your template, either get a large piece of brown warehouse wrapping paper or large sheets of poster-board and tape the poster-board together to make a sheet large enough to cover your door panel surface. (the poster-board is a much more stable selection). Cut out a "template" using your door inner surface as a pattern. You will only need one, since the opposite side door is a mirror image of the final template. The first cutouts you need to make are the inside door handle and window-crank shafts. Measure from bottom of door and front or back of door to center of shaft and mark that distance on your template. Cut out a 1/2 inch diameter hole in your template for the shaft, then hold your template up to the inner door and see how the template fits the shafts while checking bottom and sides of the template for alignment. If your hole is a little bit off, you can cut it slightly larger and refit the template to the3 door again. Ultimately, the final holes for the door handle and window crank shafts need to be big enough for the backside of the door handle to poke thru, so the hole is much larger than the shaft, but that only aids in your ability to fit the template on the shafts. Once you get the door handle and window crank shafts fitted thru your template, tape the template to the inside of the door temporarily with masking tape that can be easily peeled off later. Take a small ballpeen hammer or similar surface and RUB it all along the outer edges of the template where the mounting holes are. Doing this will expose the location of the holes in the door by making a round mark on your template. Remove your template from the door and lay your template on the Masonite to be used as your door panel. Align your template PERFECTLY with your Masonite cutout. CENTER-punch the holes for your door handle and window crank. Use a nail and hammer to punch thru your template to locate the CENTER of you door mounting holes but do not allow the nail to poke thru the Masonite. This is only a reference point. Once all holes are located remove your template and save it for the opposite side door. Use a hole-saw in an electric drill to make the large holes for the door handle and window crank handles. Hole-saw size must be large enough to allow the extended portion of the back of the door handle, but small enough to cover the door handle tension spring. Now measure your mounting clips from center where the clip pokes thru the hole in the door to where the clip fits snugly into the hole you will make in the masonite. For example, I have a bunch of OEM clips that measure 1/2 inch exactly from center of punch-in to EDGE of hole you need to make. So, measure from center of nail-hole on your Masonite over 1/2 inch and mark the EDGE of your holes for the clips. You can use a hollow punch set to punch these holes thru the masonite. NOTE: The OEM clips are for 3/32 inch thick Masonite which is not readily available. If you got 1/8" thick masonite, it may be necessary to gouge out 1/32" on the outer face of the Masonite so that your old clips will fit in the masonite. If clips are bent, try to restore or get new clips. Make sure that new clips have the same CENTER-to-EDGE measurement. I have seen some replacement clips with a LONGER C-to-E measurement and if those are used, there may be problems aligning your new door panel with the door structure. |
02-10-2023, 06:45 PM | #4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Granite City, Illinois
Posts: 3,008
|
Re: 56 door panels
BTW, the clips go into a row of approximately 1/4" diameter holes located all along bottom and both sides. The top of the door panel is held in place via the lower portion of the window garnish moulding. There are (2) interior screws that go thru the window garnish moulding that may need to be located in your new Masonite panel if you cut the top of the panel too high. The top of the panel only needs to be tall enough to allow the panel to be tucked underneath the garnish moulding.
|
02-10-2023, 08:54 PM | #5 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 63
|
Re: 56 door panels
Make one panel out of clear Plexiglass. Easy to see location of all holes.
|
02-18-2023, 09:52 AM | #6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Pittsford NY. USA
Posts: 1,096
|
Re: 56 door panels
Sponsored Links (Register now to hide all advertisements)
__________________
1952 Ford F1 1965 Ford Falcon Sprint 2007 Ford Mustang GT |
|
|
Sponsored Links (Register now to hide all advertisements) |
|