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Old 19-02-2019, 08:04 PM   #1
NC_Steve
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Default Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

So I bought a car from the auctions and this is one of the many faults I found. Would this be a roadworthy item?

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Old 19-02-2019, 08:26 PM   #2
mike_nofx
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

Probably not very roadworthy.

What did you buy?
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Old 19-02-2019, 10:04 PM   #3
EDManual
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

any little dent that is part of the chassis writes off a car as far as insurance is concerned. I dont know about for a RWC, but you would need a VASS certificate (in vic) to prove its been fixed properly which probably cant be done without a chassis swap out?

No kidding, I had a triton that had a dent about as big as a 10 cent coin and about 3mm deep in a bar that went in between the chassis rails. It was a welded in cross bar. Written off! No real other damage.
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Old 19-02-2019, 10:05 PM   #4
EDManual
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

what is this car? I am thinking you wont have much luck.
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Old 20-02-2019, 01:28 AM   #5
FG50T
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

Looks like a bomb went off in there.
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Old 20-02-2019, 08:26 AM   #6
whitelion65
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

Ex hire car, by the looks!
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Old 20-02-2019, 08:52 AM   #7
Citroënbender
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

I'd say it's been hooked for a recovery manoeuvre, had similar damage to the rear crossmember on an Alfa I bought once - luckily for me it was a bolt-in part.

Straightforward repair, caveats of rarity (availability of donor cut) and amount of dismantling required for safe access (ie, does tank have to come out) apply. You could even make a tidy "cap" from a donor part.
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Old 20-02-2019, 11:13 AM   #8
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

Quote:
Originally Posted by Citroënbender View Post
I'd say it's been hooked for a recovery manoeuvre, had similar damage to the rear crossmember on an Alfa I bought once - luckily for me it was a bolt-in part.

Straightforward repair, caveats of rarity (availability of donor cut) and amount of dismantling required for safe access (ie, does tank have to come out) apply. You could even make a tidy "cap" from a donor part.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Plus one to this ..

do a nice neat repair job, & Give the entire undercarriage a thick coat of sound deadening Black shyte...
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Old 20-02-2019, 12:10 PM   #9
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Default Re: Undercarriage damage and roadworthy

Looks pretty bad but I reckon I could fix and/or cover that up well enough to get through a rwc.

If you have a club hammer and a welder you can bodge your way through this. If you have an angle grinder too, we're laughing... It'll look mint.
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