
Pretty sure that's a factory seam, with seam sealer in it. You can weld if you want, but adding a bit of sealer would work too.
I don’t have access to a welder in my parking spot, for now can I just drill those holes to stop the cracking and the ave it like that til I have the space for it?? Also what size hole should I drill??Drilling the "stop holes" keeps it from getting bigger; welding it up makes it stronger.
Thanks for the tip. From the looks of it, it seems like it it’s an L from the very top and it goes Str8 down. Do I drill on the very end of it on the left side, then on the bend when it goes down and all the way at the bottom, or just the very top left and the very end at the bottom?Hard to tell where the crack stops. Does it split at the end? I would think 5/32"-3/16" would be fine.

To fix cracks in metal like that you drill two holes, at the ends of the crack, then weld it up.
You sure?? It looks like that sealer is “ripping” along that seam. If that’s the case I’ll just go ahead and drill those 2 holes on the horizontal crack.The vertical part isn’t a crack, that’s just the firewall seam
To me it seems like the vertical seam sealer is showing signs of cracking also. I’m thinking I’ll just wait on the crack fixing for now because I’d rather take the whole dash out and do it the right way. Is there a fix so this won’t happen again? Bracing or something??I assumed it was just the horizontal section that was a crack and the vertical section was a seam between panels.
Haha I didn’t even think of that, gonna drill right through the heater coreBe mindful of what is on the other side of the firewall if you decide to drill....
To me it seems like the vertical seam sealer is showing signs of cracking also. I’m thinking I’ll just wait on the crack fixing for now because I’d rather take the whole dash out and do it the right way. Is there a fix so this won’t happen again? Bracing or something??
Haha I didn’t even think of that, gonna drill right through the heater core![]()
I actually have both of those braces on the bird currently and it still happened. I honestly don’t like how the SCP LECB welds with a lil tab to the frame it doesn’t seem strong enough.I don't have them on my car, but I think these two braces are supposed to help with that. The second requires pretty minor welding. They honestly don't look too bad to fab up yourself if you were so inclined.
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Dang, I kinda figured that area was just weak sauce. I bought some 3m dp420 epoxy that’s supposed to be a really strong adhesive. I’m hoping it’s strong enough to bind that area together without having to weld it, if it won’t work that project will have to wait til I can park this sucker and remove the dash and legit weld it up.I don’t think the seam sealer is cracking I think it’s just sloppily applied. If it were cracking you’d see additional metal cracking at that other spot weld below that’s perfectly intact. The whole joint is kind of sloppy from the factory, it’s not even welded where it attaches to the floorpan/tunnel, just pop riveted!
As for how to prevent it? LECB braces won’t add any torsional rigidity if that’s what causes these cracks so it might be peace of mind but it’ll be specious. I honestly don’t know the true forces that cause them, I’ve seen cracked firewalls on low mile “grandma only drove to church on sundays” cars and intact ones on cars like mine (knock on wood). They might crack from flex or they might crack from simple expansion/contraction as temperature cycles.
I agree, don’t do anything hasty to cause a a bigger issue(like setting the insulation pad on fire from the welder lol)
Sounds good thank you for the adviceDrill the stop holes, and epoxy a plate across the crack; if it keeps flexing, it will break the epoxy, but it'll give you a clue how bad it is.
I’m pretty sure that stuff is like the 3m panel bond, which cures with a lil bit of give to it. The 3m dp420 I got is epoxy and cures solid. If it cracks the plate for sure there is some serious pressure going on there.I don’t know how strong that 3m stuff is, but if you really want to stop it without welding, do like Greg says with the plate, but use Lord Fusor panel bonding adhesive. Once that stuff cures, not even god can get it apart!
