DIY: Oil cooler opening mesh & grille replacement
Very, very nice, Parmer8!!!
If'n you don't mind, in a day or two I'm gonna merge this thread into the "Protect those Oil Coolers!" DIY thread, here... I think your idea belongs there with the other great inventors of this mod. :D
If'n you don't mind, in a day or two I'm gonna merge this thread into the "Protect those Oil Coolers!" DIY thread, here... I think your idea belongs there with the other great inventors of this mod. :D
Try a metal supply shop, you can often get mesh in 4' X 8' sheets and sometimes in half sheets. Often it costs less for the whole sheet than what the auto speciality places charge for a small piece. Occasionally the metal supply places will have scrap pieces that they will let you have cheap or even free.
Originally posted by Omicron
Very, very nice, Parmer8!!!
If'n you don't mind, in a day or two I'm gonna merge this thread into the "Protect those Oil Coolers!" DIY thread, here... I think your idea belongs there with the other great inventors of this mod. :D
Very, very nice, Parmer8!!!
If'n you don't mind, in a day or two I'm gonna merge this thread into the "Protect those Oil Coolers!" DIY thread, here... I think your idea belongs there with the other great inventors of this mod. :D
I don't mind at all.
I just bought the gutter guards at Lowes and was wondering if anyone has had any problems with them melting or any other problems now that you have lived with them a while being they are plastic?
I just put my black plastic home depot gutter guard in.
Not too happy with how it looks, but the mounting worked very well. I think I need to use the 2 peice setup for the front so it doesnt bend. However, it IS hardly visible and should do the job until I get ambitious enough to remvoe the bumper again :D Just used some large washers with the screws to help hold it in place and took it for a drive. As long as it deflects some of the bugs/stones/crap hitting my radiators, I'll be happy.
BTW, another thanks to Hymee for his bumper removal guide.
I also finally found out why I could never get my foglamps out. They had GLUE beads on them. Took me 20 minutes to get them open with the bumper off. I never woulda managed it from underneath.
Of course, now I cant find the ultrawhite bulbs I had for them, but at least I left it easier for me to work on.
Not too happy with how it looks, but the mounting worked very well. I think I need to use the 2 peice setup for the front so it doesnt bend. However, it IS hardly visible and should do the job until I get ambitious enough to remvoe the bumper again :D Just used some large washers with the screws to help hold it in place and took it for a drive. As long as it deflects some of the bugs/stones/crap hitting my radiators, I'll be happy.
BTW, another thanks to Hymee for his bumper removal guide.
I also finally found out why I could never get my foglamps out. They had GLUE beads on them. Took me 20 minutes to get them open with the bumper off. I never woulda managed it from underneath.
Of course, now I cant find the ultrawhite bulbs I had for them, but at least I left it easier for me to work on.
Be careful when you are putting the Gutter Guard in I bent a few fins when installing nothing serious but of course pisses my **** self off.
Have to say this is my favorite kind of DIY because it meets the 3 main criterea of 1)inexpensive 2)someone who is not a mechanic can do it 3) Works well
Now I just need to remove my bumper and put the AC cooler guard in place. Wish we could have a bumper removal clinic in NJ as even though it looks easy I know the Murphy Laws very well.
Have to say this is my favorite kind of DIY because it meets the 3 main criterea of 1)inexpensive 2)someone who is not a mechanic can do it 3) Works well
Now I just need to remove my bumper and put the AC cooler guard in place. Wish we could have a bumper removal clinic in NJ as even though it looks easy I know the Murphy Laws very well.
who needs those fancy new $40 oil cooler protecters.
if it's good enough for the Porche guys it's good enough for me
ahhhh have to do a search for gutter guards the link is not direct.
if it's good enough for the Porche guys it's good enough for me
ahhhh have to do a search for gutter guards the link is not direct.
Last edited by flatso; Apr 13, 2004 at 05:01 PM.
Anyone with the Apperance Package do these themselves i.e. grill for both the oil coolers and the radiator? All the pictures I've seen so far are of 8's without the AP and Rotary Accents, considering the front air dam and the accents might change a few things.
I'm in the process of fixing an air dam I got from a member on here and then am going to install it myself. I have already purchased some custom aluminum grille material which is 120cm X 20cm or 48" X 8". It is still aluminum color but, I have black trim paint I am going to paint it after fitting cutting the parts and fitting them to size. I'll probably try putting it behind the air dam, that's the appearance package air dam. I have the front Rotary accent too. I may have to buy another piece of this stuff to do the oil coolers, though. It's an APC Sport Racing Series product and I probably paid way more than it's worth so i may just go get the gutter guard stuff for the oil coolers.
About the mounting...I noticed screws mentioned. However, I will probably do this differently. Urethane cannot be glued to and most adhesives will not stick either. How it is repaired in the industry is by melting it, something like welding but without a torch. A solder iron is perfect for this.
You need some urethane material to use to melt this to the front bumper. The bumper is pretty thick material so you can get it hot enough on the back side to melt with the material you are using to mount this by.
I reatached the mounts for the front air dam of the one I purchased damaged and they are stronger than the stock original mounts. I am awaiting an order from the paint manufacturer to be able to finish the rest of the air dam.
For the crack, I used some of the urethane from the air dam that doesn't show and has no structural purpose. I melted into the damaged area, and placed some of the material in there and melted it down and smoothed it out. Afterwards, I shaped it with a course shaping tool then sanded it down to the original surface profile. Once painted, from the front, you would never know it was damaged.
Another thing I used to help reinforce the rear is some aluminum screen material you can get for use of repairing with bondo. It is sticky on one side and is easy to shape and bend into place. This I attached by the same method, melting material below and using spare pieces above the screen to melt the two together. I will be taking some pics soon to try to explain this with images.
About the mounting...I noticed screws mentioned. However, I will probably do this differently. Urethane cannot be glued to and most adhesives will not stick either. How it is repaired in the industry is by melting it, something like welding but without a torch. A solder iron is perfect for this.
You need some urethane material to use to melt this to the front bumper. The bumper is pretty thick material so you can get it hot enough on the back side to melt with the material you are using to mount this by.
I reatached the mounts for the front air dam of the one I purchased damaged and they are stronger than the stock original mounts. I am awaiting an order from the paint manufacturer to be able to finish the rest of the air dam.
For the crack, I used some of the urethane from the air dam that doesn't show and has no structural purpose. I melted into the damaged area, and placed some of the material in there and melted it down and smoothed it out. Afterwards, I shaped it with a course shaping tool then sanded it down to the original surface profile. Once painted, from the front, you would never know it was damaged.
Another thing I used to help reinforce the rear is some aluminum screen material you can get for use of repairing with bondo. It is sticky on one side and is easy to shape and bend into place. This I attached by the same method, melting material below and using spare pieces above the screen to melt the two together. I will be taking some pics soon to try to explain this with images.
Hey DMenac7, could you post some pics of the work you're doing? With my front air dam and rotary accent, I don't know how I'm going to mount the grille on the back of the bumper. Definitely can't use wire ties since they'll show up on my winning blue exterior. Any ideas?
Another question. I've noticed on my AT 8, that the on the right of the bumper the oil cooler is visible and on the left it has a plastic cover and I have fog lights. Can someone explain to me why the MTs have both oil coolers exposed if they have fog lights and the ATs have only one exposed? Also, if you have an AT what have you done to match both sides instead of just protecting one oil cooler? Because my 8 has the Appearance package and Rotary Accents, I'm just wondering how I can do a clean job.....
Originally posted by Hymee
There is only one oil cooler on the standard power engine, as in the auto.
There is only one oil cooler on the standard power engine, as in the auto.
goto www.racingbeat.com
They sell oil cooler guards for a decent price. I think it's like $ 38 for two.
They sell oil cooler guards for a decent price. I think it's like $ 38 for two.
Originally posted by Xystas
goto www.racingbeat.com
They sell oil cooler guards for a decent price. I think it's like $ 38 for two.
goto www.racingbeat.com
They sell oil cooler guards for a decent price. I think it's like $ 38 for two.
Thanks Omicron - and I also have the screen to protect the most vulnerable bit - the radiator/condensor 
If anyone wants oil-cooler screens only, please PM me.
Cheers,
Hymee.

If anyone wants oil-cooler screens only, please PM me.
Cheers,
Hymee.





