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Rank: Member
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Rank: Member
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This is how I fitted seatbelt mounting plates to the B pillar of our EH ute. It already had a hole in the pillar for the old style "through the pillar" upper bolt. The hole in the outer skin was filled and the hole on the inner panel was reused to mount the upper plate. Minimum plate size (VSCCS requirement) is 3750sqmm. That's generally 75x50mm. The upper plate is 100x50mm and the lower needed to be trimmed to 85x50mm to keep the retractor as low as possible on the pillar. Centre hole is the seat belt mounting hole. The outer 2 holes are for plug welds to hold the plate in place. All the holes were deburred inside the pillar to ensure the plate is flush with the pillar Cleaned up and ready to slide the mounting plate up through the large factory hole in the pillar below my holes. You can get your hand in there easily. Plate fitted and held in place with a seat belt bolt. Plug welds done I held the retractor up to the pillar to find the best position. The lower hole in the picture is where it will mount. The upper hole will be a welding hole. I then marked out a triangle shaped cutting line and removed this piece of pillar. Cuts done. I would recommend cleaning the pillar now as everything is still flat. A flap disc will clean everything for welding in just a few seconds Look what I found inside. This ute has SO much dirt and gravel in it. It is still falling out of places I didn't even know it was possible to get into.. Edges cleaned ready for the plate to go in. Plate fitted. A tack at the top holds it in place. Bend the tab back and weld. Welding done. No pics of the welds before I ground them. Not pretty. Haha
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1 user thanked the eh for this useful post.
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I have just spent the last couple of hours reading this thread in full. I had only glanced at the updates before. Wow, what a great level of detail - not only in the work, but in posting the extensive photos & text for others to enjoy, and learn.
I love what you're doing with the ute - all the mod-cons and safety upgrades that we take for granted these days, but in a classic Holden body. You've absolutely nailed it when it comes to making a cool, safe, reliable & enjoyable vehicle. It doesn't need a blown SBC or massive tubs to be impressive. |
Cheers,
Mick _______________________________________________________________
Judge a successful man not on how he treats his peers, but on how he treats those less fortunate. |
1 user thanked commodorenut for this useful post.
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Originally Posted by: commodorenut I have just spent the last couple of hours reading this thread in full. I had only glanced at the updates before. Wow, what a great level of detail - not only in the work, but in posting the extensive photos & text for others to enjoy, and learn.
I love what you're doing with the ute - all the mod-cons and safety upgrades that we take for granted these days, but in a classic Holden body. You've absolutely nailed it when it comes to making a cool, safe, reliable & enjoyable vehicle. It doesn't need a blown SBC or massive tubs to be impressive. Thanks Mick, I love playing with my cars and find it very therapeutic. I do take heaps of pictures also so that I can remember what the hell I have doneand what goes where when I pull everything apart... Glad you enjoyed looking through my adventures...
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Modified glovebox lined with speaker box felt. Ready to go back in for the final time.
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What model is the EPAS column from? How are you going to control it? |
Cheers,
Mick _______________________________________________________________
Judge a successful man not on how he treats his peers, but on how he treats those less fortunate. |
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Originally Posted by: commodorenut What model is the EPAS column from? How are you going to control it? It's an XC Barina column. Controller is from Rallywiz in UK. Made to suit Barina specifically http://www.rallywiz.com/Shop/
Steering wheel Boss kit is also from the UK. It suits a Vauxhall Corsa C. Fits straight on to the column and matches the SAAS steering wheel.. Edited by user Sunday, 30 October 2016 6:20:29 AM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified
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