Hello All,
Earlier this year I posted a query on a variety of restoration forums regarding what to do when your sheet-metal screws enlarge the holes and no longer work. This is specific to the screws that hold on the myriad amounts of trim on our doors. Being aluminum (or aluminium for those on the other side...) there is only a limited number of times you can insert, remove and re-insert such a screw into soft sheet metal before it simply won't work.
When I had my doors apart last year getting the screws back in didn't work too well. Now most are loose and won't tighten.
No good solution seemed to emerge; JB-Weld followed by re-drilling, or hammering the hole tighter with a dolly and ball pein hammer seem to be the solutions offered. None of those seemed long term or particularly elegant to me.
I dug a little deeper and was surprised to find that the solution exists, and I'm astounded nobody pointed it out to me; I stumbled upon it from one of my fastener suppliers. The solution is called a rivet nut:
Download Attachment: Rivet Nut.jpg9.4 KB
Basically it is something like a pop-rivet, installed with a special tool. Drill out the bad hole to a size dictated by the proper size rivet nut; insert the nut and the tool, and crimp in place. Instead of an ever enlarging hole for sheet metal screws you now have a threaded hole. Swap out the oval-head sheet metal screws for STAINLESS machine screws and you are set.
My local repair facility's body shop has these; apparently all late model Mercedes use something like this to install license plates on the rear. They'll be happy to lend it to me when I get my door apart again.
These are available in a variety of sizes for a variety of materials. They install blind (from one side) and are nearly flush with the surface. They are made by a variety of manufacturers, some plain, some knurled, and some hex; the hex ones require a special punch to get the hex-hole in your sheet metal. Riv-Nuts is a brand name but there are others. And you can get them at Grainger's. Do a search for "Rivet Nuts" and you'll see a variety. Emhart, Atlas, Marson all make them.
While I'm hesitant about drilling holes larger to accomodate these my holes are already too large.
When I get it done I'll report back.
Michael Salemi
1969 280SL
Signal Red 568G w/Black Leather (Restored)
President, International Stars Section
Mercedes-Benz Club of America