This is the remnants of the donor piece where I cut my patch from. If you look at the stinger behind where the sheet metal was, you can see the large amount of surface rust. this is just getting to the point where it's in danger of rusting through. I decided to stick with the original support for just this reason. It's only bent up and can be straightened to match up quite nicely.
Here is where two boxers meet (my 40 year old VW and my three year old Subaru). Nothing inspires creativity like desperation. I thought for about twenty minutes on how to straighten the corner support out. I went through every scenario from beating it to death with a hammer to using a jack to push it back into place to just using the metal from the donor piece. Luckily, my eyes fell on a come-along in the garage that we bought to take down a tree and inspiration struck. So I swung my Subaru around and hooked it up to the bus. With a few cranks of the handle on the tool, the stringer bent back into place. It was a tug-o-war between the car and the bus. Believe it or not, the car won. Just as the piece was lined back up, the bus (wheel chocks and all) started to slide backwards. The little wagon never budged.
This is the final test fitment of the donor. This thing has clamps all over it to line it up. It's going be fun to see the final fit of this thing. There's even a clamp inside the engine compartment to help the donor piece line up with the corner. You can see the yellow end over the distributor. Also note that the reverse light hole is now cut out. It looks perfect and the holes line up level with the opposite side.
For this piece I'm going to use a combination of lap and butt welds. The bus was pretty wavy back here from the hit it took and the only way to make it look right will be to use this method in conjunction with some filler.
Next week I'll prep the interior with some rust bullet and get to work with the welder.
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