So the tears have been shed and she met my friend the sawzall....Actually I found a super duty version of the dremel a buddy had to be much cleaner......
Over the Weekend I went out with a couple fellow Western Washitonians from the board. My goal was to see how much I had to cut to make these tires fit.
Here's a link to the fun.
http://www.explorerforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=126194&page=1&pp=20
To my sad wonder I found that I was rubbing about a half an inch of sheet metal and in several places on the inner fender liner. The rear stuffed great with no concerns. It's just the edge of my tread on the front while turning and compressing.
I was utterly horrified by the process of cutting on my baby, but it was that or fiberglass fenders, and gears are more important right now.
I attached a few pictures of the process and my tears.
In this first pic I was just getting a general idea of where to make my bend to make it even with the upper fender body lines. The length of the bend was to try and smooth the line out, and the measured area to go away was at 3/4". After the bend I figured it would have moved the fender back an inch in truth it was a bit over 1.25 which works well, and gives enough room that with the angle I can get the flaps back on the front without cathing them with the tire. I don't like them, but I spend a lot of time on gravel roads and it raises hell with the paint.
Now the first thing I faced was figuring out how I was going to get the fender liner to move back an inch+ evenly. When I pulled it out, I found that there was a sheet metal seam sticking out about an inch and a half. It was holding the liner from moving back. This was notched at the top and bottom with the saw and bent with visegrips and a hammer. Now that left the liner hanging up on the bottom fender mount.
There was about 2" of metal sticking past the last bolt and it also hung very low. It showed no signs of having had the tire touch it, but I figured while we are at it, cutting it off will give more play with the liner. In the below pic the cuts and bends have been made. And yes I shot it with the flat black rust paint after this pic. The interior seam only moved about 3/4 of an inch but a couple strategic notches alowed us to move the liner back well over an inch.
Next came the scary part. I marked the spots and handed the saw off.
We made three cuts in the factory fold. One at the top of our bend. One on the bottom corner, and the last one on the bottom fender where Our bend would end. Due to the lack of a tool selection at our local Home Depot and Shucks auto we used hardwood shims on the inside and the out with vise clamps (not grips..clamps) We first straightened out the factory bend very gently. Then took the whole piece and bent it inward at the new line. It was tough to keep it even, but there were several clamps to help you adjust just where you were pushing. On the passenger side we didn't cut quite far enough and got a small ripple at the top of the bend, well bottom too. On the drivers side we cut a little too far and have a tiny little notch visible ( less than a penny width but I am picky)
All done and said with a bit of touch up paint the passenger side turned out pretty good. There is just those little ripples at top and bottom. But they are barely visible unless you are looking in the wheel well.
The driver side didn't turn out so well. Everything went the same, but the factory bend did not come out nearly so smoothly. In the middle it is still bent out. We tried to bend the whole panel anyway, but the two bends fought each other and the new bend won't "square" off as nicely as the other side. With time I will get it evened out, but nobody I have shown noticed. My problem is I can see two bends and it looks funny plus kills almost a half inch" of tire space. Not to mention that it limits my ability to use the afore mentioned "gravel flaps"
I think with some creativity at a later date it will flatten out.
Besides who cares what my bent up fender looks like when it is all under the flap anyway.
Note I actuall gained a about an inch and a quarter of space between the tire and fender. In other words I went from a tight two fingers to my fist. Adequate I believe. The inner part of the fender liner had bowed in with being remounted in a stretched position an inch further back. To accomodate this I wallowed out a few of the holes to give play and used a super duty zip tye to yank it back toward my body mount. Sadly that cleared up more space than all the cutting behind the liner
Here's a before and after for you. For some reason the pic doesn't really show all my new found space, but you get the idea
Before
After
As a little side project waiting for paint to dry I filled all the holes left by the removal of my tupperware. I found these little plugs at Lowes Hardware. They are to fill those extra bolts holes in metal shelving and such. I took a few out to the truck and found the right size. They fit very tight against the body and the head is not very big at all. Nice! I started to paint the ones that got cleaned with the fender getting bent. With the touch up paint. They look like they belong there. The first pic has the same thing you find in your body panels only black filling the holes the second pic is my new find pre touch up paint.
Anyway there be the latest and one of the sadder moments in my trucks life. I just kept whispering to her to wait a couple seasons and I would get her some fiber galss fenders, and cowl hood before I had all the scrathes and dings washed away at the body shop. First she has to let me get her built, Then we will get her back to being sexy

After all ya got to show me you can work before I care enough to worry about your beauty.
Oh yeah I'm ...chained plus kids.