I'm looking at buying a bunch 50 Olds 88 repair panels from a couple of different manufacturer Classic2Fab in Michigan, EMS, Classic Fab in Mass and others mainly i'm looking for the bottom pieces inner & outer rocker panels all floor pans & lower 1/4 panel areas areas door to wheel opening upper wheel opening and wheel opening to bumper most of the parts fit Chevy & Pontiac of the same year any opinions one these, like to hear what you have to say
I had the best fit using EMS panels. All repo panels need some massaging. Specifically, I used the inner and outer rockers, rear quarters in front of the rear wheels, and all or parts of floor pans. The inner rear wheel well fronts I fabricated out of another company's 1/4 panels. If you have to replace body/rocker panel to frame supports know that Olds and Chevy are not the same but Chevy can be modified to splice in and work. Other things I recall, if possible cut the existing 1/4 panel an inch or so in back of the door opening. That way you do not use the forward edge of the repop 1/4 and keep the same crisper factory bend in the door opening. Be able to back away and look at the car as you go. I screwed up the rockers on one side the first time by bringing them straight back instead of tapering in to the rear fender.
Thanks for the info in your post a pair of Classic2Fab front pans came with the 49 Pontiac coupe i bought on Hamb there decent 18 gauge that's one reason i was looking at that brand - there shipping was priced right for the 13 pieces i might order the more info i get helps make my decision easier about fit and quality
Bobert & Rocket88, just ordered the EMS Part # 203 lower front quarter panel both sides Chevy of the 40's supplies that same EMS part Thanks for you help 12-13-12 - just got these 1/4 repair panels from EMS today nice stuff i'm happy with the quality now just to get then on
I've got a similar project going on a '50 Olds Model 76 2-door. I'll be interested to know how your replacement sheet metal parts work out. I need to replace the inner and outer rockers, floor pans, trunk floor and rear quarters. I get to MN a few times a year, in the St Paul area.
I'm in the same boat as you i need inner & outer rocker panels they some rust but that's the time to just replace instead of patching the rear EMS quarter panel patches are for Chevy's they do not have the recess like the Olds for the bumper i checked out your 50 Olds album a lot of guys i know got a whole floor from a donor car they saved time and money doing a one piece repair, i'm thinking about doing that myself my body work is on hold till i get the motor & trans bolted in so that will be quite a while when you come to St Paul send a pm i'm less then a hour west of there nice to see another 50 Olds coupe getting saved being your Father's 50 Olds even cooler
I used (the center part of) an EMS tailpan on my 50 Pontiac - nice heavy material - took a little tweaking, but no big deal.
thanks for buying from us! a tech note, many 49 chev pieces will work on a 1950 olds 88, not all, and some ok with a bit of tweaking ( hey its a olds) and some oldsmobiles are not close to 49 chev's. if you call our shop (216-541-4585) with the year, body&style number from the firewall tag our tech dept will get back to you with a answer on what we have the ems guy
these things are garbage. I'm working on a car right now that had these installed by someone else, lucky for me they did not use the front part that has the door jamb in it because the stamping it not as good as factory and the corners are not even close. the worst part is the wheelwell part, I will have to cut it off, and fabricate the corners otherwise the car will never be able to have skirts on it, plus it does not match the rest of the wheelwell. not even close. the corners on the patch panel are rounded, and the factory ones are very tight and square.
I, as mentioned early on, did not use the portion of the panel next to the door opening because of the difference in sharpness of the bends. Had no trouble at all with skirt fit. Yes you need to fabricate the bends that hold the skirt but that was no big deal. Saved the parts from one side and fabricated the other using two pieces. I don't recall having to cut anything in the wheel well opening.
It has been awhile since we last connected. I plan to be at the National Antique Olds meet in Shoreview in a couple weeks. Don't know if you might have considered the same. I'm tackling rebuilding a 324 just now. Have the whole front end off the 50 club coupe. Hope to have the old six pulled before I head to MN.