Well, the frame is steel, so steel riv nuts would be the best...
They usually coat them with cadnium or some other coating to keep them from rusting.
The others can sometimes have galvanic reactions with the steel bolt... but would work too.
I have both aluminum and steel riv nuts.
I bought a Harbor freight kit, with 1/4-20 as the biggest riv nuts. then 10-32, and 2 other smaller sizes that I haven't used.
The kit came with aluminum riv nuts, but I bought steel to re-supply the bigger sizes.
The Harbor freight tool can barely do the steel riv nuts.... I kind of wish I would have bought a better tool. This is the kit I have
Bought the same one. It works pretty well. Make sure to get extras mandrels if you are doing a lot of steel rivnuts, they have a tendency to wear quickly.
If you use well nuts, then you don't need a special tool for installation. As an added bonus, their rubber bodies may help absorb vibration that would translate to panel rattle, and the rubber helps seal the holes. Also, no galvanic corrosion, which was the OP's initial concern.
I'm trying to find some ideas for holding my body panels on when they come in, and I don't have any well nut experience. Do you think they would hold up long term? I would be worried that a few thousand miles of vibration would damage the rubber enough to fail.
My plan so far was to use rivet nuts and run foam rubber tape between the panel and frame tubes to prevent rattling.
Yeah man stainless rivnuts are a bear to pull. We had to install some for a Cessna windshield pain in the butt... Aluminum rivnuts or well nuts would be the best way to go.
Well nuts are easy to replace. Loosen/remove the fastener to minimize the amount the body has expanded, then pull them out with pliers and pop in a new one
Has anyone used rivnuts/well nuts to attached the floor/firewalls or just the side panels? I think having them removable could be nice, but not sure how they would hold up long term. (Never used them before)
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