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#61 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: middle of Iowa
Posts: 1,001
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They are not using an original 32 frame to build their bodies on, so I don’t think they should be guaranteeing it will fit an original frame.
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#62 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Mid-Coast Maine
Posts: 3,346
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Looks like a 32 frame to me.
The photo is not close enough for me to see what is going on with their floor to frame detail. Their floor could have worked if the body was placed correctly. Since they didn’t, I don’t see how you could fix it without cutting weld or spot welds. With that much effort, I would replace the floor with a correct reproduction as I mentioned above. |
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#63 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: middle of Iowa
Posts: 1,001
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Those are obviously repro rails.
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#64 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Belgium, West Europ
Posts: 111
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Quote:
Looking at the reportage, they put a support between the frame and the bottom of the quarterpannel. This one measure 3 1/2 in. On my car, I have 4 1/2. In the inside of the trunk, this shape shoudn’t be seeable. On mine, we can see the top of it. The whole body must go down on the floor. Thank you everyone for your help. We’ve covered all the bases. |
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#65 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2015
Posts: 11,643
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Quote:
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#66 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Mid-Coast Maine
Posts: 3,346
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#67 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Germany
Posts: 255
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You get what you pay for…..
Did you expect brookville quality for that price you paid ? Why didn’t you bought one in pieces and built it yourself? After you solved the rear body situation( you need to cut everything loose up to The b pillar and then reattach everything)) what do you do about the soft body lines ( stampings) ? Still will look like a fiberglass body. All in all known problems here in Europe for years for the body. Cry one’s buy brookville.. |
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#68 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Belgium, West Europ
Posts: 111
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Quote:
The main reason I didn’t build by myself was to save time and use their experience in building bodies. A lot of guys are satisfied with the quality of the swedish bodies. Mine as a manufacturing issue. I’m here to find out what was the problem and how to solve it. When you pay someone, don’t you expect the job is done correctly ? I think so. |
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#69 | |||
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Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2026
Posts: 1
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Simon from JOCAR here. To be transparent, I'm not here to contribute much more to solving this because I have already done a lot of it over email, and I did for a long time consider staying out of this but there are some things here that are just too blatantly wrong that I can't really choose not to comment. I will spend some time clarifying some things and explain how we build the bodies in the end, but first I want to comment on some statements:
Quote:
Quote:
And yes, sure, if you count that the floor is not original we have had comments about that as well. However, we offered the option of an original floor from Brookville to make up for this, and we had one lying around here for years because no one wanted to pay extra for it. So we know for sure that the non-original style floor is a non-issue. Quote:
For those interested; our bodies are all built on a frame, there is no part of the floor assembly that’s built in a jig or similar, but on an actual frame. If something would differ from an original frame then it would be the same on all bodies we build, but variance on more than a few mm is just impossible. HOWEVER, as original frames and some repo frames can have minor differences on them we prefer to build the bodies directly on the frame that they are intended to be used on. So IF there are bodies with odd measurements out there they are either assembled with our panels, or they have been built on a frame that is not ours to fit that exact car. If this is done and the body is sold at a later stage then I do obviously not have any control over what the guy who sells it says. I don't believe this to be common though. About the actual gap height: we build our bodies with a gap above the tank of about 25mm assuming a Tanks Inc tank is used. This is to make sure there's enough space between for the pickup tube assembly. A majority of projects we're involved in uses Tanks Inc's tanks so it's a natural adjustment we made basically from the start. To be completely honest I do not know what the original height should be, we started to make the bodies this way ages ago and the original height something we have not cared about after that. Harold, if you actually want this solved you are more than welcome to deliver the frame and body to us and we'll adjust the frame and fit the body to it - we have the expertise to do so and it's really nothing odd or hard for us. And as a final word, for those of you who feel offended by my harsh tone in this post; it makes me really sad when people cannot appreciate that there is a company here in EU that actually goes through all the effort to make steel bodies and have provided hundreds of people with the possibility to build a new steel -32. You can speak with basically any of our customers about how we handle issues here, when we make mistakes - and we do - we do our absolute best to own up to them. But this nonsense is not one of them. |
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#70 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: middle of Iowa
Posts: 1,001
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Always nice to hear both sides. As he said, deliver the body and your frame to Jocar and they will fix the issue. Easy peasy.
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#71 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Belgium, West Europ
Posts: 111
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I really apologies to the whole Barn community for what’s going on here.
No more to say. |
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#72 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Mid-Coast Maine
Posts: 3,346
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Quote:
I too would take everything to the fabricator with your gas tank and frame and tell him what you want for a gap. JocarHotRods mentions setting the gap at about 25mm but from your photo, you have around 55mm, too great of course. If you decide to do nothing, you'll wish you had before you assembled and painted. Now is the time to repair it.
__________________
Archives of historical but relevant older articles: ------------- Hover mouse over the links below and click! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--------------- Rumble Seat’s Notes Techno Source for the 1932 thru 1953 Flathead Ford |
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#73 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Belgium, West Europ
Posts: 111
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Yes, I do apologies because the situation is becoming critical.
People are calling me a liar, and I can’t stand that. I didn’t make any of it up. |
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#74 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Solihull, England.
Posts: 9,239
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Just an observation but My stock bodied 32 sedan on a stock frame with a stock tank has a lot less than 25mm clearance between the rear part of the body and the tank. I'm not saying my frame is right as I had to repair it, but there must exist a correct dimension for the rear of the body above the tank, or more importantly the rear of the body above the frame horns.
Mart. |
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#75 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 1,901
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On the front edge of the frame horn covers there are 2 holes for the installation of a couple of small rubber bumpers to cushion the clearance between the frame horn cover (essentially the frame) and the body. Unless I'm missing something, this should indicate whether or not things are anywhere close to where they were intended to be, should it not?
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