Cam wrote:A grinder is a FAR more useful tool than a saw because you can cut AND grind! For car resto work it's got to be a grinder because you can't grind down welds with a saw! icon_lol.gif
Ah, the welding has yet to happen, and a grinder will be on the shopping list - This is about the best tool for the job in hand, which is chopping up a couple of cars (anyone want a part stripped and rear end damaged Dolomite before it dies? Thought not ;) ) and then chopping the rubbish out of the pickup cab. What I'm trying not to do is say "We need 100 quid's worth of tools right now" as it might put them off, so going for a little and often to avoid financial shock to the people paying
Nibblers are great for flat sheet metal but don't like bumps and pressings. For car bodywork I would not bother with a nibbler.
A good pair of tin-snips is VERY useful for fabricating the odd panel/patch so get a good one (left AND right handed if you can afford).
Somewhere I have some surprisingly not bad Focus own range straight cut aviation style snips. I quite like them, but I fancy the idea of trying out a nibbler sometime and I was under the impression they're a bit less "fussy" to work with when chopping a long way into a sheet. But I'm willing to be corrected on that
bigginger wrote:I used the saw for removing the floors on one of the PUs, and found it easier to be certain of avoiding the chassis. As I remember, I used a grinder to cut the bits over the chassis itself, with a 20 inch cold chisel to lever the floor up and away a bit. I would't fancy doing it with a hand nibbler, though I'm sure it's possible.
Sounds like a good way to do it

I liked the idea of getting in there with something less brutal than a grinder, esecially over the chassis areas, but a hand nibbler would probably be quite hard work compared to a power tool, so I might just try and be careful with a grinder.
Now to work on getting the tools (saw tomorrow, grinder hopefully soon) and parts for it all - The long wanted list will probably grow as I remember stuff, and it'd be nice to see it start shrinking in the not too distant future!
