Plugging eight holes in the floor-advice?

Discussion in 'Technical' started by gdemopesq, Jan 29, 2008.

  1. gdemopesq

    gdemopesq MOTOR CITY MAV

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    I finsihed my fabricating of my bucket seats tonight. Tomorrow I will pull them out and put in new carpet and then re-install. I have this issue though:

    There are 4 holes in the floor that the previous owner installed non-racing ugly seat belts. I pulled them as I prefer the factory ones. Then none of the bench seat holes matched for my buckets. So I have 8 holes in the floor.

    I have a grommet kit from Harbor Freight but that really doesnt help as the grommets have holes in them. I was going to use sheet metal and rivets for each hole. I have looked all over and cant find an assortment of black rubber plugs. Any suggestions? Should I just put round head bolts in the holes?
     
  2. 71gold

    71gold Frank Cooper Supporting Member

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    black RTV and a penny...:yup:

    ...:thumbs2:
     
  3. gdemopesq

    gdemopesq MOTOR CITY MAV

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    RTV? Is that a black sealant?
     
  4. don graham

    don graham MCG State Rep

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    The carriage bolts would be a temporary fix. I think i'd have them welded up if possible. No chance of them coming off then.:)
     
  5. 71gold

    71gold Frank Cooper Supporting Member

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    :thumbs2:
     
  6. CornedBeef4.6L

    CornedBeef4.6L no longer here

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    You cheap bastard. I suggest using at least a nickel:D
     
  7. 71gold

    71gold Frank Cooper Supporting Member

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    Cheap....you want to hear Cheap....i have used...slugs...from electric outlet boxes...:yup:

    ...:Handshake...
     
  8. PaulS

    PaulS Member extrordiare

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    Just put a large copper backer on the underside and weld those holes closed. The coper slab will keep you from burning the hole biger (if you are careful) and then gets knocked off. Use a copper slab at least two inches thick for best results.
     
  9. wagesofsin

    wagesofsin Official Lurkologist

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    id just tack the slugs from an electrical box underneath. be careful though , galvanised gives the effect of flu like symptoms after welding, if not properly ventilated. but they wont rust, leak, or fall off. and no one will know the differance, unless they are lookin for em. and if you dont have access to a welder, get some epoxy from home depot, it sets up in about 10 minutes. its pretty strong stuff.
     
  10. kukm66

    kukm66 Member

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    The method of using copper as a backer, then weld the holes shut has been used for many years for closing up holes in fenders. There was an episode on one of the restoration channels where they eliminated the chrome and performed this task. I will be using this sometime later as I have a few holes in the rear lower quarter where some nitwit used the "drill holes, pull out and slap 3 tons of bondo" method.
     
  11. PaulS

    PaulS Member extrordiare

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    Works well. I have used it many times to plug holes in everything from sheet metal to 3/4" steel plate. You get a solid weld - no leaks and structurally at least as good as the original metal.
     

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