Guys, you may have seen I've posted a few questions about rocker panel moldings. In the process of installing my rocker panel moldings, I have discovered that I may have an alignment issue on the driver's side, where the bottom leading edge of the door meets the fender and rocker panel.
Eons ago, when I put the door back onto the car after repaint, I thought I'd done a pretty darn good job of aligning the door to the body. The body lines, everywhere except the junction noted above, are phenomenal. Everything I'd read stated to ignore the alignment between the door and fender... which is good since the fender was not yet installed when I aligned the door. :-)
When the fender was installed, I had to pull the bottom edge of the fender outward to obtain decent alignment with the bottom front edge of the door. At the time, I thought this was OK. BUT, now, when trying to install the rocker moldings, I realize that pulling the fender outward to align with the door might have been a bad idea.
At the junction between fender and rocker, the fender sticks out beyond the surface of the rocker panel by ~3/16". I'm concerned the rocker panel molding may not snap into the retainers because the surface from fender to rocker is not planar.
Against better judgement, after a couple hours I convinced myself to mess with the lower door hinge. Remember this is not a daily driver, this is my humble attempt at concours restoration, thus messing with anything painted makes me excessively nervous. Anyway, I was able to pull the front bottom edge of the door inward approx 1/16". Doing so allows me to reduce the gap at the fender-to-rocker junction by that amount. I cannot pull the door inward any further, because I can hear and feel the door hinge bolts hitting the slots in the door, meaning I've reached maximum amount of travel allotted by the ford designers.
So, I'm looking for some advice. Here are the options as I understand them:
(1) Live with the door/fender/rocker alignment as-is (very nice), which means the fender sticks out from the rocker by at least 1/8". This may mess up the ability to install the rocker panel molding. If the molding does install, I'm certain over time the molding is going to apply pressure to the paint on the fender and rub it (the paint) off. Looking at photos from the tear-down process many years ago, I can see paint rubbed off at this area, so I suspect this is the way the car rolled off the assembly line.
(2) Push the fender back in, so that it is flush with the rocker panel. This will eliminate alignment concerns with the rocker panel moldings (good). But, it means the front bottom edge of the door sticks out from the fender by ~3/16" (bad). I don't think I can live with this..... as viewed from the front, the fitment bothers me greatly.
(3) Tear everything apart...bumper/grille/fender etc so that good access to the bottom door hinge can be obtained. Remove the hinge, enlarge the holes in the hinge by 1/16" so that I can push the bottom front edge of the door inward by that same amount. Reassemble. I don't think I can swallow this amount of tear-down at this point in the restoration.
(4) Locate one of those crazy expensive "S" shaped door hinge wrenches and attempt to remove the lower door hinge from the car without removing the fender. Then make the same modification to the hinge as described in #3. I still hate the thought of all the things that can go wrong by trying to remove the hinge (think paint chips), but option #4 is less risky than #3.
Looking for advice. Tips on adjusting door hinges/alignment. Tips on installing the rocker molding. Comments on other folks cars and whether or not their fenders stuck out beyond the surface of the rocker. Comments on removing door hinges at this point in a restoration. Etc.
Thanks.