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Hey all

As above i need 20mm, i mean who doesnt, but what i need it for is the rear of a 32 gtst

The only over fenders i can find offering 20mm is Dmax and Origin.

Has anyone had any experiences with them? How was fitment out the box?

Is there any other options?

And best places to get some from??

Cheers

Adam

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Mine pulled this much

2012-03-10_09-22-35_99.jpg

2012-03-12_12-39-32_871.jpg

Nearly there

2012-03-12_12-43-40_649.jpg

Using this method (guards lips already flattened):

Shamelessly stolen from the 300 forum. I used this to get my rears to fit and it works a treat!

First of all, you're going to want to jack up the rear by the tow hook, and remove he rear wheel. The you're going to want to disconnect the lower mount of the rear shock.
2011-09-08_21-04-39_179.jpg

Remove the nut and bolt, and swing the lower mount out of the way.
2011-09-08_21-05-01_813.jpg
2011-09-08_21-05-12_673.jpg

Make sure the lower mount is clear of everything. You do not want it to catch on anything.

With the car in the air, and the wheel at full droop, this is what it looks like:
2011-09-08_21-07-01_7.jpg
Not too bad, but remember it will camber in a bit, like so:
2011-09-08_21-09-35_748.jpg
The fender just catches the tire, so rubbing will occur.

Next, you're going to want to heat up the fender, from where I'm point at, and to the right. Use either a heat gun, or if you're brave, a propane torch, lol
2011-09-08_21-07-23_731.jpg

You want to hit the fender from the bottom and up, to heat up the lip of the fender on both sides.
2011-09-08_21-07-57_624.jpg

Next, grab about less than a thumb's width of newspaper for the initial treatment.
2011-09-08_21-09-18_240.jpg
Again, I'm using mechanic's paper floor mats. It works just as well.

With the fender heated, stuff the newspaper into the wheel arch, between the fender and tire. Make sure to have the newspaper span the whole area you heated up, or else you'll pull one section more than the other.
2011-09-08_21-10-09_127.jpg

Then you're going to drop the car slowly, until the tire touches the floor, and the wheel begins to tuck itself inside the fender.
2011-09-08_21-10-26_708.jpg

Now, it will make some noise it is just the sound of the fender sliding over the newspaper. Let it sit for couple of minutes, to give the fender time to cool off and take shape. You're going to want to then raise the car and remove the paper. Drop it back down to where you're tucking tire, like so:
2011-09-08_21-11-48_615.jpg

You're going to want to check for rubbing issues. What I do is take some thin paper, and slide it between the tire and fender:
2011-09-08_21-12-10_552.jpg
2011-09-08_21-12-16_224.jpg

If the paper snags, then you still need to pull more. The tire was touching the fender in the area between where the paper is placers in the two pics.
Again, heat up the fender, and grab more paper.
2011-09-08_21-12-56_607.jpg

Rinse and repeat as needed.
2011-09-08_21-14-52_349.jpg

You can see the fender slowly taking a flat flared look
2011-09-08_21-15-08_905.jpg

Just as a warning, the driver side fender will require more effort to pull, due to the gas cap there reinforcing the fender. So don't freak out if you need significantly more newspaper on the driver side than on the passenger side.

Keep repeating the process by adding a slight amount more newspaper at every pass. My passenger side took 2 passes. Driver side took 4. Again, this is normal. And here are the results:
2011-09-08_22-01-35_565.jpg
2011-09-08_22-19-51_204.jpg
2011-09-08_22-19-58_166.jpg

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