sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 24, 2020 Hoping that we can have a discussion about front frame rails. I am working on my 1969 Coupe and at the moment getting ready to weld in a front frame rail patch, the floor support and torque box. According to the frame dimension picture that has been posted many times the front of the front frame rail measurement "A" should be a quarter inch higher that the measurement "B" at the cross member support area. My "A" measurement is almost 1/2" lower than the "B" measurement. This is with the car level at the rocker panels. I have had a couple people tell me that the front frame rail does slope down. Those of you that have way more knowledge than me on this and have done several cars, what is correct? If the diagram is actually correct, how do I go about fixing this? The gaps for my doors and fenders did not seem to be that bad before disassembly but it is possible that it was worse than I remember. Calling @latoracing @mustangstofear @Ridge Runner Here is a link to the diagram again for easy reference. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mike65 470 Report post Posted April 24, 2020 sixt9stang, where do you need to patch the frame rail?. I had to patch both of the front frame rails where the front floor supports overlap & weld to the frame rails. Passengers side, Drivers side, Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mustangstofear 608 Report post Posted April 24, 2020 Measure from the top of the framerail down in both locations and both sides and see what you have. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 24, 2020 3 minutes ago, mustangstofear said: Measure from the top of the framerail down in both locations and both sides and see what you have. Yep. That is where I was measuring. I have done it from the top and the bottom. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 40 minutes ago, Mike65 said: sixt9stang, where do you need to patch the frame rail?. I had to patch both of the front frame rails where the front floor supports overlap & weld to the frame rails. Drivers side, I am doing the drivers side, just more metal. I am guessing the bottom of the frame rail and the floor support that goes on next should be level when the rocker panels are level. I am trying to figure this all out because if those pieces are supposed to be level, then the frame dimensions in the drawing above would not make sense. I would have to bring the front of the frame rails at the front cross member would need to come up almost 3/4". Doing this would make the bottom of the frame rail and floor support not level in my opinion. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RogerC 134 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 Looking at the diagram, the frame rail looks level across the top and tapers slightly on the bottom aft of the bumper mounting till it gets to the steering box mount area where it drops significantly. That slight drop is probably the 1/4 inch difference. Haven't looked at mine lately. I'm sure MTF will have an answer though. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 2 minutes ago, RogerC said: Looking at the diagram, the frame rail looks level across the top and tapers slightly on the bottom aft of the bumper mounting till it gets to the steering box mount area where it drops significantly. That slight drop is probably the 1/4 inch difference. Haven't looked at mine lately. I'm sure MTF will have an answer though. Yes, my car is the opposite though. Right now my "A" measurement is 21". My "B" measurement is 21 and 7/16". Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 @sixt9stang I thnk that the issue is you have your rockers level. The diagram does not show rockers so may be the rockers are not level on that diagram. Try to level the car to 11 3/16 dimension at the aft end of frame rail, and X-6 dimension under front frame rail and see what A and B comes out to. 2 latoracing and sixt9stang reacted to this Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 30 minutes ago, aslanefe said: @sixt9stang I thnk that the issue is you have your rockers level. The diagram does not show rockers so may be the rockers are not level on that diagram. Try to level the car to 11 3/16 dimension at the aft end of frame rail, and X-6 dimension under front frame rail and see what A and B comes out to. I think you nailed it! I found my old cheap laser level and put it at the X-6 for a datum line. Instead of 11 3/16" I got 15 5"16. I am going to lower the rear of my car the 4 1/8" and see how things look. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 10 minutes ago, sixt9stang said: I think you nailed it! I found my old cheap laser level and put it at the X-6 for a datum line. Instead of 11 3/16" I got 15 5"16. I am going to lower the rear of my car the 4 1/8" and see how things look. Yup, lowering the back 4 1/8 will lift A about1/4" over B (estimating without doing the math based on dimensions from drawing). Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 On that diagram, everything is based on X-6 and X-6 1/2, ideally you need to level to datum based on getting these 2 dimensions right. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 Thanks again. I never even thought about the fact that the drawing does not show the rocker panels. I just assumed those would be level with the frame rails. I am getting closer now. Hope to finish leveling it tomorrow and then maybe I can start welding in new metal. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 1 hour ago, sixt9stang said: Thanks again. I never even thought about the fact that the drawing does not show the rocker panels. I just assumed those would be level with the frame rails. I am getting closer now. Hope to finish leveling it tomorrow and then maybe I can start welding in new metal. I hope you are working on a level surface, might want to check that first. Concrete garage floors are usually not level. Let us know how it goes. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 8 hours ago, aslanefe said: I hope you are working on a level surface, might want to check that first. Concrete garage floors are usually not level. Let us know how it goes. I think it is pretty level. I only have a 4 foot level but everywhere I have checked so far has been level. I think what I will do when I go back out to work on this today is measure down to the floor from my laser line at several locations just to be sure. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
latoracing 256 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 As you have discovered, the datum line on that drawing is not where you would think it should be. Having a line to measure from is helpful, but you've got to remember how these cars were built and the not so accurate tolerance they were built too, along with many years of use. I personally build with the rockers level in all directions. The frame rail tops are fairly level (I have checked this on several cars and they vary) and reference the datum line for verification. The laser level is also another great way to set this line and can be referenced with a ruler under the car, and you do not rely on a completely flat floor (none of them are lol). If you had a surface plate setup, that would be different. How much have you taken apart? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 28 minutes ago, latoracing said: As you have discovered, the datum line on that drawing is not where you would think it should be. Having a line to measure from is helpful, but you've got to remember how these cars were built and the not so accurate tolerance they were built too, along with many years of use. I personally build with the rockers level in all directions. The frame rail tops are fairly level (I have checked this on several cars and they vary) and reference the datum line for verification. The laser level is also another great way to set this line and can be referenced with a ruler under the car, and you do not rely on a completely flat floor (none of them are lol). If you had a surface plate setup, that would be different. How much have you taken apart? I have the drivers rear fender apron removed and then the lower portion of that frame rail, torque box, and floor support. Right now I am just trying to set the car to a known position so that I have something to go off of in order to start welding in new metal. Originally I thought it would be good to level the car at the rockers and that the floor supports and bottom rear of the front frame rails would also be level but now realize my error. It just seemed logical to me that the rockers would be parallel to the datum line but definitely found out that is not the case. I think I am going to go buy a better self leveling laser level so that I can set it in one spot and leave it. I am also going to remove the rear axle and leaf springs I think so that they are not in the way. There is some patch metal at the rear shackle of the passenger side so it is tough to get that measurement. Thanks everyone for the help! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 1 hour ago, sixt9stang said: I think it is pretty level. I only have a 4 foot level but everywhere I have checked so far has been level. I think what I will do when I go back out to work on this today is measure down to the floor from my laser line at several locations just to be sure. You do not need a long level, just make a water level using clear tubing, a jug of water and a stick or level. You should be able to find some pictures of this setup if you search the net. I have a 25 feet clear tube I use for this purpose. You can level your jack stands and the points of the body this way. I marked some spots on my floor after using water and use those spots when I am doing alignment etc. I use floor tiles to get jack stands or tires on the low spots to level with other tires or stands. I tape my tube to a level which has markings in inches so I can measure the height difference between 2 points on the car. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 6 minutes ago, aslanefe said: You do not need a long level, just make a water level using clear tubing, a jug of water and a stick or level. You should be able to find some pictures of this setup if you search the net. I have a 25 feet clear tube I use for this purpose. You can level your jack stands and the points of the body this way. I marked some spots on my floor after using water and use those spots when I am doing alignment etc. I use floor tiles to get jack stands or tires on the low spots to level with other tires or stands. I tape my tube to a level which has markings in inches so I can measure the height difference between 2 points on the car. I actually have something like that already too which I used for my siding. This gives me a good excuse to get a shiny new laser level though. :) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 Ok. After a lot of fiddling I have the passenger side X-6 as close as I can get it and also the X-6 1/2 measurement. When these two locations are set I get 12 1/4" at "B" and 12 11/16" at "A". I am guessing this is because of a little bit of sagging in the front end. My next question is that with these locations set according to the diagram I have found that the floor support is not level. Should it be? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 The bottom of the front floor support should be level, starting from where X-6 is pointing and back; this is how I interpret that sketch. Also, there is no general tolerance given but dimensions E, F and G say plus or minus 3/16; I would use that as the tolerance for other dimensions. You are aware that X-6 1/2 is from center of spring hole, not bottom of rear frame, right? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 This is how the car was assembled, after years of usage, bending, twisting and sagging, you may not get all the dimensions on that sketch without putting it on a frame machine and adjusting by bending/pulling/pushing etc. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sixt9stang 36 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 6 minutes ago, aslanefe said: The bottom of the front floor support should be level, starting from where X-6 is pointing and back; this is how I interpret that sketch. Also, there is no general tolerance given but dimensions E, F and G say plus or minus 3/16; I would use that as the tolerance for other dimensions. You are aware that X-6 1/2 is from center of spring hole, not bottom of rear frame, right? Yes. Was trying to get as close to the center of the hole as possible. I also thought the bottom of the floor support should be level. It is possible it is sagging but it is about 1/2" lower at the rear of it than at the front. That seems excessive. Just trying to figure out where to set the new drivers side floor support. I don't know if I should set it level or try to match the passenger side. Does anyone have measurements from the bottom of their floor supports while the car is setup like the diagram with a datum/baseline? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted April 25, 2020 I would match the new,floor support to other side and check a few spots like motor mount area , front of the frame etc and see if both right and left frame rail measurements from your datum line match in those locations. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
aslanefe 324 Report post Posted May 19, 2021 I am resurrecting this old thread as it may help someone (who uses search function) in the future. I recently measured a 69 Fastback and two 69 coupe Mustangs that I believe to not have any accident damages to the frame rails etc. to find out if some of the dimensions from the diagram posted on the first post are correct. All 3 have original sheet metal. I also measured a 1970 vert but did not use the data from it as it has some sagging. Used a laser to create a datum line under the car. Laser's spec says it has accuracy of ±5/16 In. at 30 Ft. of length; as I am working on about15 Ft of car length, accuracy should be ±5/32 In. Then I created a sketch on CAD to model all 3 69s (as they have roofs and not sag a lot like the vert in time) and rotated/moved/lined all 3 up and matched 11 3/16 dimension given for rear frame rail and X-6 1/2 on all 3 cars to see how good the other dimensions on the diagram above match. Here are my findings: A is 12 3/4 in, B is 12 1/8 in (or 12 3/32 in depending if you measure from the doubler in that area of the rail or the rail), X-6 is 6 to 6 1/4 in (varies due to very common scraping of that area of the front rails). X-6 1/2 is 6 1/2 in, C is 14 3/4 in and 11 3/16 ( at the rear end of rear rails) is 11 3/16 in So, I will be using the above dimensions to fix the sagged 70 vert. 1 sixt9stang reacted to this Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
unilec 57 Report post Posted May 20, 2021 Another useful tool to have is a Tram Gauge. Easy to make one and its good if you are doing a lot of body work to check the diagonals from front to back, before you start welding on frame rails or rockers. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_I_BCkkazCA 1 Mach1 Driver reacted to this Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites