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Fumbler

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  1. Like
    Fumbler reacted to meggersdog in eBay tat volume 3.   
    https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/256307261859?hash=item3bad1a71a3:g:gpAAAOSwQNllW3PC
  2. Like
    Fumbler reacted to juular in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    Baby steps. Made it to the end of the street.

    Alternator was fine then belt started slipping. Have started work on a home made tensioner.
  3. Like
    Fumbler reacted to juular in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    Well here goes.

     
    Out of the naughty corner at last.
    Some issues.
    The fuel filter very quickly looked like this.

    And the contents of the float bowls.



    Cycled the contents of the tank through a series of filters for around 3 hours using an electric pump.

    The next attempt wasn't much better.

    Could go through a pallet of filters in no time so I set up a syringe with a bit of hose that I can use to backflush the filters with petrol and refit them.
    Have also stuck an uberfilter on. This is a fuel injection filter for a Volvo T5 so it should stop this shit getting into the carbs.

    Seems to be working. Here is the contents of the filter flushed twice.

    Float bowls are still clean so that's something.
    Still plenty of work to do.

    The mobile editor on this site is really frustrating..  it insists on you seeing this photo again and it can't be deleted.
     

  4. Like
    Fumbler reacted to egg in The new news 24 thread   
    The bloke who spotted that tatty Pug 305 a few weeks back has hit another doozy. MOT'd and taxed...
    https://www.instagram.com/p/CzvzpSto5T1/

  5. Like
    Fumbler reacted to PhilA in 1966 Plymouth Fury 3   
    This afternoon I created a wiggly pipe.

    It weaves its way around the torsion bar on the passenger side. Lines up with the notch in the subframe.

    Looks tidy enough.
    With a length of straight pipe stuffed in the end it has a nice deep note already. Next up working out where it's going to go from there.
    Phil
  6. Haha
    Fumbler reacted to Cavcraft in eBay tat volume 3.   
    Peugeot 407 irmscher 2.2HDI | eBay
    And now over to Len for his score in 'Council estate bingo'

    'Great effort with the random wheel, muddy tyre/s, broken fence/metal in the garden and house numbers sprayed on the bins. Unfortunately, though, the trampoline and other shit is in next door's garden and the lack of broken washing machines and freezers scores you down a bit'
  7. Haha
    Fumbler reacted to Cavcraft in eBay tat volume 3.   
    mini clubman estate classic | eBay 
    '2 mg front  leather seats come with car'

    Oh great, M8, can you bolt them in for me?

     
  8. Like
    Fumbler reacted to juular in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    Random bits done.
    Needed a new speedo cable as the non overdrive one won't reach the longer gearbox. Here's a comparison.

    While under there I took a photo of the finished underside since I hadn't done it yet.

    Went to refit the bonnet catch. Used a triumph release cable that was lying around but it didn't have a cable barrel stop on it. Made one out of an M6 connector nut with a hole drilled in it.

    Probably stronger than the original.

    None of the door locks really worked right, which was a straightforward remove, free up, grease and refit job. One of them needed the linkage adjusted slightly.

    One of the rear passenger doors wouldn't shut at all and would just bounce off the catch. Turns out it was clipping the sill on the bottom. This only started after I welded the new sill on which made me think maybe I'd aligned things wrong, but looking at the panel gaps I noticed that the door was simply on squint. 
    Not sure how this happened as there's no front to back adjustment on the hinges, but it's possible I damaged the hinges as I was removing the doors.
    The only way to close up the gap is to remove material from the hinge itself.

    That was a finger in the air guess but it worked perfectly. Door now snicks shut and the panel gaps are spot on.
    Meanwhile @MrsJuular made some nice new door cards to replace the ones I melted. Those will look great on the car.

    Windae washers. The car has the older style washer nozzles on the scuttle panel. Unfortunately I only had one nozzle.

    I did however have one later style dual nozzle from the donor car. This goes in the bonnet after drilling a hole.



    Skooshy.

    The car didn't come with any mirrors (they were a dealer option in 1960s South Africa!) so I added some Lucas style ones.
    Marked out and drilled.


    Finally, I couldn't get the charging system working. I'm not sure whether it was the dynamo or the regulator but solving that particular problem is expensive and the end result still fairly shit.
    I decided an alternator conversion was the way forward. @320touringkindly lent me a Lucas alternator from his spare engine so that I could make brackets and get it working before I shell out for a new one. This is a good choice of alternator as it's widespread and cheap while looking period.
    I overcomplicated this in my head. It's not a big project. Here's the alternator next to a spare dynamo bracket to check fitment.

    Solution : a couple of bits of angle iron bolted into the dynamo bracket.

    A length of threaded bar on the rear mount.

    On it goes. Used the original drive belt and bracket with a small extension on the bracket.

    And that's it. Voltage regulator binned off, then the remaining two cables on the car's loom get shoved up the alternators bum.

    That's better!
    Enjoy some night shots of POWER.

    What a dash at night.

  9. Haha
    Fumbler reacted to wuvvum in eBay tat volume 3.   
    Where's the Bargains thread?  This comedian is asking £5K for a 16-year-old Prius with over 100K on the clock.




  10. Agree
    Fumbler got a reaction from tooSavvy in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    That temp readout rebuild is just fantastic. I love the attention to detail you have.
  11. Agree
    Fumbler got a reaction from Shite Ron in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    That temp readout rebuild is just fantastic. I love the attention to detail you have.
  12. Like
    Fumbler got a reaction from Scruffy Bodger in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    That temp readout rebuild is just fantastic. I love the attention to detail you have.
  13. Like
    Fumbler got a reaction from sdkrc in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    That temp readout rebuild is just fantastic. I love the attention to detail you have.
  14. Like
    Fumbler got a reaction from mercedade in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    That temp readout rebuild is just fantastic. I love the attention to detail you have.
  15. Thanks
    Fumbler got a reaction from juular in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    That temp readout rebuild is just fantastic. I love the attention to detail you have.
  16. Like
    Fumbler reacted to juular in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    Haven't been online much but have been working away on this, mainly redoing the wiring and making the electrics work.
    This is a long post!
    Starting with the fuse box I binned off the strange stumpy top fuse fitting as it's a pain to get fuses for. As you can see the one currently there is just a normal fuse that has been chopped to fit. Ugly.

    Pliers and a drill used in anger fixed that.

    Current state of affairs.
    Alive : wipers and washers. 
    Dead : everything else!
    To cut to the chase I've essentially had to rewire much of the car. The loom behind the dash was fine but everything else was varying levels of shit. 
    One of the main issues was the factory multiplugs were heavily corroded and brittle, but also the factory fitted scotchlok and screw-in connector blocks. Yes they really did use these.
    For your consideration.

    Continuity through this mess was, well, it wasn't.
    It was decided that this whole section would be snipped out and flung across the garden. I redid it with solder where possible, and spades where not. Don't worry, this fire trap will get all heat shrink wrapped once I know it works.

    The rear multiplugs were just as awful and got the same treatment.

    Frustratingly although this made the connections reliable a lot of things still didn't work, such as the horn, high beam flash, overdrive and reverse lights. What's more frustrating is that everything looked ok, continuity and good voltage to everything.
    Eventually I found that all of the old style relays were completely unreliable and would work when they felt like it.

    Those got launched across the garden too and replaced with modern equivalents. Originality be damned.

    Lo and behold once I wired these in things began to actually work.

     
    That narrowed the list of faults to just the horn, the rear lights and the fuel and temperature gauges.
    The horn was a simple fix. The original sounders were dead (off into the depths of the garden.. bye!). Replaced those with some Halfords value units. Still no luck. Turned out the horn ring wasn't actually making a connection.
    Simple fix here, it just needed cleaned up with some sandpaper as the ring around the outside is what makes the actual connection.
    Before

    After

    That provided about 73 more beep.
    Here is a Halfords horn in place and the tidied wiring loom.

    Front lights - replaced these with some new halogen units. They seem good.

    Rear light problems were traced to poor bulb contacts and bits of corrosion in the light units.

     
    Again simple enough, these were tidied up and rewired. Where the bulb contacts had fallen off, big blobs of solder on the ends of the wires worked perfectly.

     

    Ghetto resilvering done with some foil tape.


    Redid the lens seals with some generic rubber.


    Just the number plate light to sort. It's part of the very beautiful boot handle.

    The bodged wiring is not so beautiful.

    Redone with solder and crimps.


    Fuel gauge was a head scratcher for a long time as I'd previously tested the sender as good. But it wasn't, and it took a lot of pain to get to that realisation.
    The resistor wire that the float runs along turned out to be no longer connected at the left side.

     A bit of ugly soldering got me a working fuel gauge again.

    The temperature gauge was much more complex. The original gauge is a mechanical one which works using a copper tube full of ether running all the way from the dash to the cylinder head. Of course after all this time the copper tube had burst and the ether is now in the ether.
    It's a beautiful bit of engineering inside but its also very expensive to replace.
    I had a plan.
    Step one, get an electronic temperature gauge and sender for £8. Test it in a cup of hot water. Rejoice.

    Smash the gauge to bits and graft the original gauge face onto the new gauge internals.

    Looks legit next to the fuel gauge.

    Install into the dash using a bit of board and wire it up.


    Amazingly it seems calibrated exactly to the same points as the original mechanical gauge. Happy with that.
    One final job. To make the 1/8"NPT sender fit into the 5/8UNF hole in the cylinder head. For this I tapped the collar from the original sender to 1/8NPT to make an adapter.


    MODERN

    Now the dash and windscreen trim can go back in properly.

    The fiberglass dash top I got was absolute shite and doesn't fit properly. It'll do for now.
    Have a teaser of the interior being put in at night.

    Not too far off now.
  17. Like
    Fumbler reacted to juular in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    Currently sitting in a van in a field while it rains heavily, so may as well bring this up to date.
    Filled the gearbox and diff using the little electric fuel pump I was using to transfer veg oil. It's pretty good.

    A nice milestone as the car goes back on its flat tyres.

    @MrsJuular started refitting the new headlining. THIS IS A SHIT JOB. But she made a very neat job of it. I personally would have set it on fire within precisely eight nanoseconds.

    I started fitting the carpets we picked up on the way to shitefest. I never really knew what I was buying but they are very nice.


    Glued on in some door trim. The original windlace trim is extremely expensive so I've went for some Chinese rubber instead. Enough to do the entire car and still change from £20.


    Next up, reconnecting the wiring and finding all the things that don't work.

    Refitted the fusebox complete with a 100A slow blow fuse (top).

    The original armoured ignition cable and integrated coil would have sat in a big hole in the firewall. Since I'm fitting a standard coil I decided to make up a plate to convert this space to something more tidy.


    Much better.

    Relays wired in, and a new electric fuel pump .

    Voltage regulator and washer pump.

    A lot of wiring was dead or had been butchered by past owners. The starter trigger cable had just been chopped and left in the loom. Shrug. I remade it with proper ends.


    Pulling the horn cable through the steering box with some welding wire.

     
    Steering column going back on. Again a lifesaver having a whole spare car worth of parts. The horn push mechanism was dead and a new one is stupid money.

    Steering column shroud, modified to take the new overdrive switch. Again, used the better spare.

    What a bonny sight.

    Eventually got everything working electrically.
    The cluster isn't in the best nick so I used the spare one to combine the best parts and make one good one.





    An Amazon dash really is a nice thing.

    Very close to being functional now, it's really just a case of bolting things back on and some aesthetic stuff. On that front @MrsJuular has volunteered to make new vinyl door cards to replace the ones I sent on fire. 
  18. Like
    Fumbler reacted to juular in 1964 Volvo 122S - Amazonian rustforest. Electroshite.   
    Time for another update dump, or is it a dump update?
    Attempted to get to the root of the starter motor slow cranking issue. Basically it was just full of rust and sludge.

    I'm really finding buying the scrap donor car a lifesaver, as I have two of almost everything. If I'd had to buy replacements for every part that was dead or needed overhaul I'd be bankrupt.
    So I swapped the starter with the other one and it turned over nice and sharp.
    Time to get this fired up.
    Pulleys and belts.

    Carbs and coolant hoses

    Rad. Throttle and choke linkages. Oddly frustrating to set up.

    Checked the dizzy over. Somewhat stinky.

    Rebuilding with all replacement bits and a good clean.


    Took me an age to work out how to time the dizzy, until I figured out the marks are on the pulley rather than the timing case.

    Getting very close.

    HBOL says static timing is 19 degrees BTDC. Really? Ok then.
    Let's try that shall we?
    I'm not going to build up the dash just to turn the engine over so I've hotwired the ignition using croc clips and jump leads and taking fuel from a jerry can.
    Firstly couldn't get fuel up then realised the pump is leaking. I fitted a non return valve after the pump which was enough to get fuel to the bowls.
    Well that's the very first turn with fuel in the bowls, and it's very encouraging. It really wants to live but it sounds like it's pinging like mad.
    19 BTDC? Really?
    Let's sanity check that by nudging the dizzy back to around 8 degrees.
     
    Holy shit.
    I'd planned to spend the entire day messing round with this and it only goes and starts and idles lovely. At this point I was really thrown and didn't know what to do.
    A few issues. A couple of coolant leaks that just need nipped up.  Valve cover throwing oil out everywhere. Float bowls could do with new gaskets.  But very minor things and I'm well happy!
  19. Haha
    Fumbler reacted to Cavcraft in eBay tat volume 3.   
    Toyota Yaris Verso | eBay
  20. Like
    Fumbler reacted to PhilA in 1966 Plymouth Fury 3   
    Zort, crackle.

    Bolted down.

    Need to sort the linkage out because I undid it, but forgot it needs to be done up before clamped in place.
     
    Phil
  21. Sad
    Fumbler got a reaction from mercedade in The grumpy thread   
    Not only were all three dimmer switches broken, I was greeted by this lovely thing. A qualified, accredited electrician wired this up 15 years ago. Why he didn't press the switch against the wall, pull back out and check all his connections were tight is beyond me. It's 20 extra seconds to your install time for extra security. I'm not grumpy because of a potential fire risk, I'm grumpy because of the lack of pride the guy took in this work.
  22. Haha
    Fumbler reacted to Split_Pin in The new news 24 thread   
  23. Sad
    Fumbler got a reaction from myglaren in The grumpy thread   
    Not only were all three dimmer switches broken, I was greeted by this lovely thing. A qualified, accredited electrician wired this up 15 years ago. Why he didn't press the switch against the wall, pull back out and check all his connections were tight is beyond me. It's 20 extra seconds to your install time for extra security. I'm not grumpy because of a potential fire risk, I'm grumpy because of the lack of pride the guy took in this work.
  24. Sad
    Fumbler got a reaction from Coprolalia in The grumpy thread   
    Not only were all three dimmer switches broken, I was greeted by this lovely thing. A qualified, accredited electrician wired this up 15 years ago. Why he didn't press the switch against the wall, pull back out and check all his connections were tight is beyond me. It's 20 extra seconds to your install time for extra security. I'm not grumpy because of a potential fire risk, I'm grumpy because of the lack of pride the guy took in this work.
  25. Sad
    Fumbler got a reaction from sdkrc in The grumpy thread   
    Not only were all three dimmer switches broken, I was greeted by this lovely thing. A qualified, accredited electrician wired this up 15 years ago. Why he didn't press the switch against the wall, pull back out and check all his connections were tight is beyond me. It's 20 extra seconds to your install time for extra security. I'm not grumpy because of a potential fire risk, I'm grumpy because of the lack of pride the guy took in this work.
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