Update: I solved one half the problem mentioned above. I managed to get the door latch to work more freely and that helped.
However the door sags a bit and I figure that I need to shim it.
Questions:
Where do I shim it? I figure under the post in front of the door????
Where do you get the shims or what are they made of...?
How do you jack the body up to slide the shim in place?
Thanks for all the help
Did this about 10 years ago based on information in a fisher body book covering 1933--1936 cars. Any movement in the hinge pin area , should mean new hinge pins. This is separate from the whole hinge assembly moving, that's a different problem.
To get the door to come up so that the body lines align you need to shim under the middle body mounting bolt in center of the door area.
Peel back the floor carpet exposing the middle of the door body bolt and loosen it by removing the nut.
Skootch your head under the side of the car with a bottlejack , placing it onto wood or bricks so it can reach the wood floor side rails. Better to have a piece of wood ..hardwood , on top of the jack head to spread the load.
Now jack the body up where the bolt is until the body lines align. Use body shims between the steel frame and the wood side rails. Once its aligned let it down slowly and if aligned your done other than tightening the body bolt.
To get the hinge out place a container on the running board as a drip tray and using your best brand of rust buster, soak it multiple times over a week, until you can drive the hinge pin upwards with a drift & hammer.
There is an actual tool to do this and I think somebody will have plans or ideas of how to construct it or in what book to see what it looks like.
mike lynch...........
