Hi Wilhelm. Yup, I think working on the car is fun too. I know how you feel about the rusty screws and the rusty edge on the roof support. I'm glad all my rusty fasteners are replaced, and that I repaired the roof support. To remove the roof support, the headliner on the inside of the car needs to be removed, as well as the doors. If you have a good headliner, and don't want to replace it, that might be a factor in deciding to remove the roof support. If you decide to remove the roof support, I can offer the following experience. It takes a few days. The doors are heavy. They weigh about 60kg. It takes two people to install them, but if you are strong, you can remove them alone, though two people is better. David Teitelbaum's warnings are all good ones. I won't repeat them, but I feel they should be followed. I would add this warning: If a badly supported door fell closed, and your arm was in the way, I think it would break. If a finger was in the way in a bad place, I think it would be cut off. I made a conscious effort to keep my body parts out of the way. To remove a door, assuming your t panel is off and the torsion bars are removed: Remove the brackets attached to the roof support (the wiring harnesses for the doors go through them) Remove the cover of the hole in the roof support. Disconnect the connectors. With the door open, and supported safely, pull the unconnected door wiring out of the roof support. Before unbolting the hinges, decide where you want to put the doors, so you can move them immediately from the car to the storage location, to minimize the risk of damage. Unbolt the hinges, saving the easiest to remove nut on each hinge for last. Figure out which nut is easiest as you go. Before removing the last nut on each hinge, lower the door as far as you can so it has less far to fall if you lose control of it. It's helpful to have a helper hold the door at this stage. If your helper is holding onto the heavy part of the door while you remove the last hinge nuts, it should go smoothly. If you lose control of the door, remember it's only a car door. Don't do anything risky to catch it. You can buy a new one. The hinges may have spacers under them, which set the height of the doors when installed. Keep track of which ones were where. They have to go back there later. Mine were rusty, and needed to be cleaned. After the doors are removed and stored away, you can remove the roof support. Inside the car are six 10mm bolts that go through the fiberglass underbody into the bottom of the roof support. Remove them. There may be some pther small screws holding the roof support onto the fiberglass underbody, if I remember correctly. At this point, I believe the only thing holding the roof support to the fiberglass will be the any parts in the way, sealant, and the wiring. It should be clear how to remove it at this point. After I removed my roof support, I took it and the hinges to a friend, who sandblasted them to get rid of all the rust. Then I carefully cleaned and repainted them to protect them. I intend to never drive my car in the rain, having seen what it can do. I feel very good about the job I did. It's a shame no one ever gets to see it because it's hidden. Installation is the reverse of removal. While I installed each piece of the roof support, I put a lot of sealer underneath, between, everywhere I thought it might help keep out water. When you install the doors, don't tighten all of the nuts just yet. Leave them loose enough to move the door around to adjust the fit. Are the spacers under the hinges back where they came from? There is one subtle thing when installing and aligning the doors. You may have noticed that the doors have a slightly different shape with the torsion bars and struts removed. That's because the doors are so heavy, their weight bends the door a little bit when they are held up by the torsion bars. If you can't seem to get the doors perfectly aligned without the torsion bars, this might be why. Try to align the door as well as you can before installing the torsion bars, but remember that you might have to have the torsion bars installed to align the doors the last little bit. I had to do this. Be careful not to smack the torsion bars with tools if you do. Aligning the doors took me several hours. About the dents in your torsion bars. A very smart metallurgist recommended to me that I sand down the the dents in my torsion bars. The dents concentrate stress, and make it more likely the torsion bar will break. I sanded my torsion bars down just enough to remove my dents, which were about .1mm deep. I made sure to sand a wide area, to spread the stress over a longer section of the torsion bar. Then I polished the whole surface with 1600 grit wet sand paper. I figured out that the surface stress on the torsion bars is 96000 psi, which is a lot. It's remarkable to me they even work, let alone work over and over again. Have fun. Rick Gendreau. 11472 To address comments privately to the moderating team, please address: moderators@xxxxxxxxxxx For more info on the list, tech articles, cars for sale see www.dmcnews.com To search the archives or view files, log in at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: dmcnews-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/