I'm in the process of getting my floorpans replaced, and from what I understand, the floorpan does not include always include enough of the sheet metal right before the firewall, with the arrow pointing to it in this photo:
I have heard the terms "toe kick panel" or "toe board" to refer to this area.
Would anybody happen to know the correct name or OER part number for this panel? I can't seem to find it anywhere. Or does OER just not make this panel, and it needs to be bought from an alternate manufacturer?
just to be clear, this is the front left floor pan, part number "C107L" which I am planning on purchasing:
I'm not sure if it includes enough material to cover the "toe board" panel area that I've pointed to in my original picture, so I'd like to purchase a separate "toe board" piece just to be sure that I have enough material.
just to be clear, this is the front left floor pan, part number "C107L" which I am planning on purchasing:
I'm not sure if it includes enough material to cover the "toe board" panel area that I've pointed to in my original picture, so I'd like to purchase a separate "toe board" piece just to be sure that I have enough material.
I had to buy a toe panel to get that high up. They are repopped, and matched my original well.
I used to be indecisive. Now I'm not sure. I feel like I am diagonally parked in a parallel universe. 1968 400 convertible (Scarlet) 1976 T/A - 455 LE (No Burt) 1976 T/A New baby, starting full restoration. 1968 350 - 4 speed 'vert - 400 clone (the Beast!) 1968 350 convertible - Wife's car now- 400 clone (Aleutian Blue) (Blue Angel) 2008 Durango - DD 2008 GXP - New one from NH is AWESOME! 2017 Durango Citadel - Modern is nice! HEMI is amazing! 1998 Silverado Z71 - Father-daughter project 1968 400 coupe - R/A clone (Blue Pearl) (sold) 1967 326 convertible - Sold 1980 T/A SE Bandit - Sold
For anyone reading this in the future: The OER floor pans, part numbers C107L & C107R, which I purchased from Classic Industries (they bore a CHL sticker, indicating that these are just re-branded CHL parts) had enough "toe board" material to negate the need to buy a separate toe board panel.