Securing the Floorpan

Securing the Floorpan

Author
Discussion

Ex-Biker

Original Poster:

1,315 posts

247 months

Tuesday 30th December 2003
quotequote all
What method is best to fit the floorpan?

I believe I have a number of options

1. Rivnut
2. Pop rivet
3. Self tapper
4. Panel bond

Which ever I decide, I am going to use panel bond. This is firstly to create a watertight seal between chassis and floorpan and secondly for strength.

So I suppose the question is more to do with whether I need anything else and if so what?

I was happy to use widely spaced self tappers initially, until I saw a picture where rivets where used. I do see a problem with rivets, which is the need to seal the holes after.

Any and all suggestions welcome.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year

grahambell

2,718 posts

275 months

Tuesday 30th December 2003
quotequote all
Hi Mark,

Think pop-rivets is probably your best bet as you're not likely to be wanting to take the panels off again.

It'll give you a true racer style job that should match the 5exi's image. It'll also give you a smoother floor than you'd get with rivnuts and be a hell of a lot less work than either rivnuts or self tappers.

Using the panel bond as well as the rivets would of course give you both a stronger job and a seal.

Not entirely sure what you mean about needing to seal the holes if using rivets though. If you mean the hole that the steel shear pin goes through, in my experience you're nearly always left with a bit of the pin in there filling the hole anyway.

Have fun, and look forward to seeing your car at Pistonfest.

eclipsar

112 posts

252 months

Tuesday 30th December 2003
quotequote all
I used pop rivets and sikaflex on my GTR.

Regards
Chris

Wacky Racer

38,159 posts

247 months

Tuesday 30th December 2003
quotequote all
Definitely pop rivits, in conjunction with silicone sealant, or such like, but make sure you line the panels up correctly as rivits are a pain to drill out, if you make a mistake.....


Good luck with the build by the way

Flintstone

8,644 posts

247 months

Wednesday 31st December 2003
quotequote all
Hey Mark! I'll give you a hand. I've been rivetting today and it's fun!

Mind you, after a few I do tend to get wan.......I mean rivetters cramp.

eclipsar

112 posts

252 months

Wednesday 31st December 2003
quotequote all
A lot easier with a air riveter

andycanam

1,225 posts

264 months

Wednesday 31st December 2003
quotequote all
Ohhhh.... memories of drilling over 3000 holes for the rivets on my Ultima are comming flooding back.

Don't forget to clean up the holes on the chasis and spray a blast of waxoil into each hole.

Good luck
Andy

eclipsar

112 posts

252 months

Wednesday 31st December 2003
quotequote all
I lost count after a 1,000

Ex-Biker

Original Poster:

1,315 posts

247 months

Thursday 1st January 2004
quotequote all
Many thanks.

I guess rivets it is then.

busa_rush

6,930 posts

251 months

Thursday 1st January 2004
quotequote all
If I was doing this again, or rather, when, I'll hire an electric or air riviter. Not doing all those again by hand. It gets painful !

cymtriks

4,560 posts

245 months

Saturday 3rd January 2004
quotequote all
I have heard of rivets working free over time. If possible I'd weld an 18 gauge steel floor in place by stitch welding at the corners and then between the first stitches. Keep adding stitches around the floor utill the job is done. Don't weld all the way round in one go as this builds up stress and distortion.

white_van_man

3,846 posts

249 months

Saturday 3rd January 2004
quotequote all
i would go for pop rivits and some kind of selant if you can get the air riviter as doing 3000 rivits with a hand gun will be very tedious, iv never heard of rivits coming loose

Ex-Biker

Original Poster:

1,315 posts

247 months

Saturday 3rd January 2004
quotequote all
Glad this came back to the top.

cymtriks, I don't fancy welding it. 1. I can't weld and 2. Galvanised floor to an already powdercoated chassis seems too much work.

Although I do agree welding is the strongest method.

Rivets
3mm or 4mm?
how far apart?
ali or stainless?
domed or countersunk?

Fair bit of choice isn't there.

Comments please.



Can anyone get a better price than £5/50 for 3mm stainless rivets?

BobM

886 posts

255 months

Saturday 3rd January 2004
quotequote all
Ex-Biker said:
3mm or 4mm?
3mm
Ex-Biker said:
how far apart?
Mine are around 30mm on the Ult, but on some panels a bit closer to get all the gaps the same
Ex-Biker said:
ali or stainless?
Never seen stainless rivets! Everyone uses ali although technically I suppose there's perhaps a risk of an electrolytic reaction between the steel and the ali.
Ex-Biker said:
domed or countersunk?
Domed
Ex-Biker said:
Can anyone get a better price than £5/50 for 3mm stainless rivets?
ISTR they were around £15/1000 in my local fastener place.

I'll add my voice to the 'go get an air rivetter' movement too! If you don't want to splash out you're welcome to borrow mine.

busa_rush

6,930 posts

251 months

Saturday 3rd January 2004
quotequote all
I used 4mm rivets and put them roughly every 25mm.

As Bob said, local fastner shop will give you a box of 1000/5000 for very little money. If not, Screwfix sell them in quantity, £30 for 5000.

www.screwfix.co.uk

grahambell

2,718 posts

275 months

Sunday 4th January 2004
quotequote all
Either 3mm or 4mm should be OK, especially at 25mm/30mm spacings.

Agree with BobM that domed are best bet, if only because it'll save you having to countersink all those holes!

Regarding rivets coming loose, think this probably refers to old racing cars with aluminium monocoque chassis. The rivets can come loose on these because they're effectively taking all the chassis stresses. In your case the steel spaceframe will be taking the bulk of those so the rivets will have a much easier life.

ultimapaul

3,937 posts

264 months

Sunday 4th January 2004
quotequote all
Try and get a very good bonding agent too. I used the Ultima supplied 'Wurth' style which is very good.


Does anyone know a good source for this product. It comes in at about £9-10 from Ultima IIRC.

Cheers

Paul.

Stansam0511

1 posts

57 months

Wednesday 31st July 2019
quotequote all
Does pop rivetting in the floor pans on a kit car effect the IVA test ?

CrutyRammers

13,735 posts

198 months

Wednesday 31st July 2019
quotequote all
nope, perfectly normal. use Pu adhesive as well to give a good bond and waterproof everything.

twin40s

153 posts

255 months

Sunday 4th August 2019
quotequote all
You can get "closed end" pop rivets.

Less problems with having to seal up the hole in the middle afterwards.