How are you welding steel to aluminum?
And all my life I've lain in bed on Sunday nights thinking "why would someone need a sheet metal rear window blank for a 4106". Any clues???
You may want to foam the inside surface to stiffen it after installation.
Well the OEM rear windows dont exist any more, the gaskets dont exist anymore, and I am using it as an adapter to fit a rectangular insulated rv window with screen from motion windows.
Thank you. I'm likely to be doing something similar, except the existing panel is fiber (or fibre) glass.
Mine had a three piece window replica made out of fiberglass panels that used the oem seal but the seal was rotten and were no longer available so this seemed like a more permanent solution.I will grind the welds flush and fill and sand so it should look like it was meant to be that way.
If I'm reading this right, you're thinking of cutting a window within the perimeter of the new window blank. I may be wrong (it's happened before), but I believe that is a low-pressure area while driving, thus would have the tendency to suck in exhaust fumes. I like the smell of diesel exhaust (preferable to the scent of the two women experimenting with aromatherapy on an airline flight a couple of days ago), but carbon monoxide comes along for the ride. It may take extra careful sealing, and a resolve to keep that window closed while in motion, but please consider whether that could present a problem.Arthur
I was very concerned by the compound curve on the 4106 rear window but it turns out with a little heat and hammer you can make a flush blank from a flat sheet of 16 gauge steel.