03-16-2009, 12:19 PM | #1 |
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Location: Rapid City, SD
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Radio panel repair
I just picked up a 1980 Silverado over the weekend. 350, 4-speed, body is excellent shape for as old as it is. Anyway, at some point someone cut the dash to put a CD player in it. Now that's bad enough, but someone then stole the CD player and so what was left of the metal rectangle where the CD player sat has now been further butchered and I don't think there is enough metal there to even put a CD player back in. Does somebody after market make a patch panel to repair this? I did a Google search, but didn't come up with much except for people cutting that section out of parts dash and welding it in or replacing the whole dash. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
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Keith ------------- 1980 C-10 1981 C-30 |
03-16-2009, 01:34 PM | #2 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
You could always just make a patch panel with a piece of sheet metal. Weld it in and cut the hole for the CD player that you want to put in.
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03-16-2009, 03:06 PM | #3 |
Arrived on a Pale Horse
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Re: Radio panel repair
Cut it bigger and use a 1.5 DIN radio. Get a guage bezel out of a 91 Burb, it'll fit perfect....
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Jason 87 V30 350TBI/400 White w/Boss V-plow 89 R3500 CC SRW |
03-16-2009, 04:51 PM | #4 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
I used a '91 Burban bezel and made my own plate and it actually looks factory IMHO.
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03-17-2009, 01:11 AM | #5 |
In the Forgotten far North.
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Re: Radio panel repair
I had a double din Sony cassette/CD player/changer controller in my '90 burb for a while.
Then I yanked it out and upgraded to a KENWOOD DDX812 Double din that I put in an overhead console. Leaving a big A#* whole in the dash that I filled in with a stereo istallation kit where I moved my switches for my rear window/heater & defroster to with a cubby hole in the bottom that I ran a lead into for my IPOD connection with enough room for my remote as well. I used a face filler panel that came with the Kenwood made out of a thin piece of plastic to hold the installation kit and mounted it to the dash by way of the 2 lower heater control mounts and the mounting holes on the right and the bottom right.
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1987 R3500 CREW CAB DUALLY (BIG RED)Acquired 06/12/2015 1990 chevy suburban V2500 5.7L My cluster Mods-Nov 2007 overhead console Stereo install Round 2 Aug 2009 Heated/turn signal mirror upgrade Last edited by BLE 'BURBAN; 03-17-2009 at 01:19 AM. |
03-17-2009, 11:39 AM | #6 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
Thanks for all the suggestions, now I guess I just have to find a newer burb bezel. I would assume that finding one without A/C is going to be next to impossible, but I'll try. Is it 90 and 91 that would be the same gauge wise and have the larger radio opening?
My other thought was just getting a different bezel for the 80 that still has the two holes for the radio stems, using that to support the front and then making sure the back was extra supported since there is no metal in the front holding up the radio. Will have to check the for sale ads for either of these, thanks again.
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Keith ------------- 1980 C-10 1981 C-30 |
03-18-2009, 05:06 AM | #7 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
Just be careful when securing the face of the radio to that plastic bezel because you can crack something really easily by tightening it too much...
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03-18-2009, 06:07 AM | #8 | |
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Re: Radio panel repair
Quote:
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_____________________________ Bryan '99 Silverado 1500, 4.3, 5-speed, reg cab, short bed '50 Chevy 2DR Hard Top, 350/350, M2 Front End, 3:08 gear, cruiser. '40 F**d Sedan, all Chevy power, Heidt's front end, TCI rear, nice driver. Last edited by S10Fan; 03-18-2009 at 06:09 AM. |
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03-18-2009, 07:05 PM | #9 |
Old Heap Driver
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Re: Radio panel repair
OK, sorry about the fuzzy picture, it's late, I'm tired, I'm hungry. LOL
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_____________________________ Bryan '99 Silverado 1500, 4.3, 5-speed, reg cab, short bed '50 Chevy 2DR Hard Top, 350/350, M2 Front End, 3:08 gear, cruiser. '40 F**d Sedan, all Chevy power, Heidt's front end, TCI rear, nice driver. |
03-18-2009, 08:16 PM | #10 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
wow that looks stock s10
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03-19-2009, 10:09 AM | #11 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
That does look good. Before you did this yours was cut out in a big rectangle to fit a newer CD player? I will have to give this a try, thanks.
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Keith ------------- 1980 C-10 1981 C-30 |
03-19-2009, 01:04 PM | #12 | |
Old Heap Driver
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Re: Radio panel repair
Quote:
Yes it was, and not a very straight cut either. LOL.
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_____________________________ Bryan '99 Silverado 1500, 4.3, 5-speed, reg cab, short bed '50 Chevy 2DR Hard Top, 350/350, M2 Front End, 3:08 gear, cruiser. '40 F**d Sedan, all Chevy power, Heidt's front end, TCI rear, nice driver. |
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03-20-2009, 08:38 AM | #13 |
Don't Crush em Restore em
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Re: Radio panel repair
Way to fix a butcher job S10fan, very impressive fix.
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TexasJeff 2009 Silver with Linen Interior Cadillac DTS 1990 Red with White Top and Interior Ford Mustang GT convertible 1998 Red with Gray Interior, C3500 Chevy Crew Cab Dually |
03-20-2009, 09:03 AM | #14 |
Old Heap Driver
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Re: Radio panel repair
Thanks for the complements.
The fix was very simple, took maybe an hour or so. The panel was sprayed with some patio furniture “textured” satin black from Rustoleum. BTW, the Rustoleum is a great fast drying paint that looks really good for under the hood detailing, or cleaning up a very used dash trim panel. I had considered replacing the dash (the complete steel portion) but it looks like the dash is welded at the windshield frame. Is that a correct assumption on my part? Bryan
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_____________________________ Bryan '99 Silverado 1500, 4.3, 5-speed, reg cab, short bed '50 Chevy 2DR Hard Top, 350/350, M2 Front End, 3:08 gear, cruiser. '40 F**d Sedan, all Chevy power, Heidt's front end, TCI rear, nice driver. Last edited by S10Fan; 03-20-2009 at 09:04 AM. Reason: CRS Disease strikes again! |
03-20-2009, 10:12 AM | #15 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
S10
I made a similar repair a couple time using sheet metal like your repair and used duplicolor black wrinkle finish paint to finish it and looked very stock great job S10 Mark
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the avatar was my 62 I owned for 27 years 84 chevy short short bed black 84 gmc long bed copper/ buckskin 88 chevy k5 blazer white Life's short make the most of it Mark aka impalmark |
09-29-2009, 11:38 PM | #16 | |
.. !WAR FEDOR! ..
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Re: Radio panel repair
Quote:
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09-30-2009, 05:31 PM | #17 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
Cut out another radio opening out of another truck atleast an 1 inch bigger than your hole and pop rivet over your existing butchered hole. Put dash bezel on. Noone will no the diference.
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Tony Kee Texas Square Bodies |
09-30-2009, 08:23 PM | #18 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
the dash is bolted on the sides and spot welded below the windshield all
the base. once you strip the dash and remove the windshield and bolts on the sides it it not hard to break the spot weld and pull it out however it would be easier to just patch the radio section good luck
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the avatar was my 62 I owned for 27 years 84 chevy short short bed black 84 gmc long bed copper/ buckskin 88 chevy k5 blazer white Life's short make the most of it Mark aka impalmark |
09-30-2009, 08:38 PM | #19 | |
.. !WAR FEDOR! ..
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Re: Radio panel repair
Quote:
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"san diego chargers #1" |
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10-01-2009, 11:07 AM | #20 |
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Re: Radio panel repair
The dash is spot welded along the windshield channel. The windshield has to be out of the truck to get at the welds. I took the dash out of a parts truck by drilling the welds with a spot weld cutter from the outside because there is not enough room to get at them with a drill from the inside. The seam has three pieces of steel there and in some places four. The cab was falling apart by the time I got the dash out. To put the new dash in another truck, you would need to cut most of the old dash out with a tin snips or sawsall. Then there is room to drill out the spot welds. The new dash would then have to be spot welded or plug welded to the pinch weld in the windshied channel.
I was going to put this dash in a cab that the PO hacked out, but decided I could fix the rust in an unmolested cab much easier. To fix the radio I would just patch a new piece in verus replacing the whole dash. You could weld/screw/rivet/bond in a piece from another dash or make a new piece for a fraction of the work of replacing the whole dash and have the same results.
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