Chemistry time!
Taking apart the doors has brought back an old issue with this car: all the old bolts are rusted and suck and always break. When I took apart the hinges I broke off several bolts in the aluminum hinges. Also the hinge pins totally wallered out the steel base-brackets, so I need to get the hinge pins out, fix the brackets, and put in new pins.
I felt, deeply in my heart, that there should be some chemical method of selectively removing steel from an aluminum part. A bit of searching, and I found out that there is!
The secret ingredient: Alum. This stuff is actually Potassium Aluminum Sulfate. I found a couple references to the process on an aircraft forum, and also found that watch-makers frequently use the technique for removing tiny steel screws from brass parts. The Cliff's-notes: mix with water, heat to off-boiling, add part and wait for the magic to happen.
It's used not only for dissolving steel out of non-ferrous materials, but for paper and fabric dying, and also in pickling! You can actually get little food-grade tins of it at the grocery store in the canning section. I bought a pound of it from Joann Fabrics for about $20 shipped. They have 5 lb bags too.
In preparation, I also bought a cheap-ass electric hot-plate and a $6 aluminum pot from the local Goodwill store.
Mixing ratios are a little uncertain on the internet, but I went with 1 cup of Alum to 4 cups of water. It seemed to fully dissolve as I heated up the water.
And the first hinge is happily bubbling away:
That's it for now!