DirtyDenim
New Member
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2019
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- 2
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- Age
- 43
Hi, got my Ram about a week ago and like everything about it except this one issue. I am a stickler for body lines and fit and finish and have already adjusted two door strikers to get panels to line up. Shame on me for not seeing this issue before signing on the dotted line.
Anyway, I've noticed that the fender "ears" on my truck and many others on the road (at the dealership, etc.) are slightly curved up and out, resulting in two things:
1. A larger than spec gap between the fender and the top of the trim/headlight. Spec is 4.3mm at max, mine is closer to 8mm (!)
2. A normally adjusted hood, with gap in spec (hood to trim/grille should be 6.3mm) sits down lower than the fenders and is not flush.
Quite a few examples I have seen are fine, though, but the majority I've seen are this way. There is no weather stripping under the fender and the chrome trim really exacerbates the gap, since it reflects black (those with body color trim/grille look better to me).
Sample photos attached. I'm wondering if this is something a good body shop can correct? I assume this involves some "art" and bending, rather than moving bolts etc...
Apologize in advance if this causes you to notice a flaw for the first time...
Anyway, I've noticed that the fender "ears" on my truck and many others on the road (at the dealership, etc.) are slightly curved up and out, resulting in two things:
1. A larger than spec gap between the fender and the top of the trim/headlight. Spec is 4.3mm at max, mine is closer to 8mm (!)
2. A normally adjusted hood, with gap in spec (hood to trim/grille should be 6.3mm) sits down lower than the fenders and is not flush.
Quite a few examples I have seen are fine, though, but the majority I've seen are this way. There is no weather stripping under the fender and the chrome trim really exacerbates the gap, since it reflects black (those with body color trim/grille look better to me).
Sample photos attached. I'm wondering if this is something a good body shop can correct? I assume this involves some "art" and bending, rather than moving bolts etc...
Apologize in advance if this causes you to notice a flaw for the first time...