I see what your saying. The brackets in pic 1/2 were both low before adjusting them. Judging by the markings on the screws they did not move but were not installed properly.Good write up but one possible issue. What if the whole black mounting piece is what is sliding down over time?
Cool, didn't want to put a hole in the metal Haha, still hate holes but I could handle it in the plastic. I'll probably try a couple screws and a little fastener. Basically sandwiching the tab between a top plate and nut block.That's the beauty of it, the screw only goes into the plastic tab. It goes no where near metal.
You'd probably be ok with the screw but the bumper is heavy. A lot heavier than it looks
Can you elaborate a little, I have the same problem on my front driver side. Car being black definitely hides the "Ford Quality" for the most part except for this.Great work! Mine is also black so any gap is barely noticeable. I did realign my front passenger fender to "catch" the front bumper tab by the headlight as it was assembled "untucked"
That is exactly what i did on mine. I ended up using my floor jack and a 2X4 cut to the right lenght to serve as a lever to jack up the bumper while the epoxy was curing.Gotcha. I only say that because when I got mine, the gap was fine, and it has increase over time, so I wouldn't know for sure which component was moving due to the the extra weight of the GT350 specific bumper. If I do this I might put a dab of epoxy on each bracket as well.
Thanks for the write-up, the finished product looks 1000x better. On a side note, I'm going to start a gofundme to get you some proper disposable gloves haha. I bought similar ones from target once to try them out, they didn't last five minutes into my project. Harbor Freight has some heavy duty ones that are thicker and last the whole project. Thanks again though!
