Meg-Lite, this is indeed the worse piece that came in this kit. This is an example of what happens when you pull fiberglass parts from their mold before the fiberglass has cured. Indeed this is what most likely happened to this piece. All of Meg-Lite's parts were warped, wavy, and fit poorly. Notice the red arrows. The red arrows first show the corners of the trunk lid as being flush with the rear window valence. The center red arrows show how much lower the center of the trunk lid is below the rear window valence. The yellow arrows show the reflection of the light, notice the light reflecting in the window, then across the trunk lid just to the left. The second reflection is from a crack above my garage door where the sunlight shines through; on the wall it is fairly strait, but again on the trunk lid it is anything but, indeed it even splits running in two different directions; truly I have seen smoother surfaces on Lake Erie. Meg-Lite promised to replace this trunk lid and never did, won't even answer his phone. I'm opting to build one from the original trunk lid as I think that will cost my customer less then the cost to fix the Meg-Lite trunk lid.
Conclusion: If you want to save a buck, Meg-Lite is cheep. If you have more time then money, and are capable of doing a good bit of body work, maybe Meg-Lite is for you. |