juular Posted December 15, 2020 Posted December 15, 2020 On 12/13/2020 at 11:22 AM, Tickman said: I've just been through the 8 months of your thread and there are far too few replies to such excellent content which must be why I hadn't seen all the progress this year had brought. Hopefully the weather won't deter you too much. Agreed. Great reading all in. Not sure how I missed so much of this to be honest. Tickman and Jikovron 2
Jikovron Posted February 20, 2021 Author Posted February 20, 2021 So just before becoming seriously ill with Covid I spent a wad on a hopeless case car which turned up the day before I went rapidly downhill. I used the proton as a winch anchor and it wasn't as grounded as the skoda untill the hedge started getting involved. So its a 1982 skoda 120LSE 'top of the range!' It came with 4 siezed wheels, engine,loads of rust and a smashed windscreen which I suspect was a garage roof coming down on it. Easy job to take the screen out and clean up the glass. Loads of vacuuming later improved matters a tad. Not the original 120 high compression engine, ti's a s110r engine which is a 1.1 but 60bhp instead of 58 It turned after some judicious force. 30years sat still, straight in the scrap pile. I had to strip the shoes and brake pads out to free off the wheels, amazingly the calipers aren't siezed. There is shit loads of work in this but I reckon a good honest no frills weld up and recommision will see it grace the black top once more. BorniteIdentity, phil_lihp, loserone and 22 others 25
Jim Bell Posted February 20, 2021 Posted February 20, 2021 Glad you're feeling better man. Rummaging around in that interior has probably given you immunity to most communicable diseases now. BorniteIdentity and Jikovron 2
loserone Posted February 20, 2021 Posted February 20, 2021 3 hours ago, Jikovron said: just before becoming seriously ill with Covid 3 hours ago, Jikovron said: I see no link here at all. Nopesiree Fucking epic though. Looking forward to updates! Jikovron and alcyonecorporation 2
Jikovron Posted February 20, 2021 Author Posted February 20, 2021 Haha true the timing was fairly apt I must admit as it was a total state inside due to damp,creatures,organic matter etc ,care was taken when vacuuming out although that's all somewhat elementary now lol.
Angrydicky Posted February 22, 2021 Posted February 22, 2021 @Jikovron - are those Withams of Walton plates on that Skoda?
Sir Chocolate Teapot Posted February 22, 2021 Posted February 22, 2021 How on earth have i only just found this gem of a thread? I am in awe of the awesomeness of what has been going on over the years in your garden. Long may it continue ,the use of great skills lavished on forgotten heaps BRAVO I just wish i had 1% of the drive/skill and numption to play this game Jikovron, juular and Jim Bell 3
Jikovron Posted February 22, 2021 Author Posted February 22, 2021 4 hours ago, Angrydicky said: @Jikovron - are those Withams of Walton plates on that Skoda? it came from the Dartford area and was only on the road for 9years before being exiled. Shite Ron, Jim Bell, Sigmund Fraud and 1 other 4
Jikovron Posted March 23, 2021 Author Posted March 23, 2021 This all happened inbetween being too rough to crack on, decided to get the engine to run, 30years meant the valves were siezed so the head had to come off. Nice easy job to free them off and clean it all up, double valve springs for high performance! Well not quite as all versions had them lol. Hammerite thyme got a workout again. I cheated here because I had a previously rebuilt carb to just fit without any hassle. So next up the starter motor was fully siezed up so was a nice quick job to remove, erm no as corrosion had set in big style. eventually it came off but the replacement I had was a bloody FWD unit with a smaller pinion matched to its motor shaft, so had to fit the rwd innards to the fwd body. Connecting a battery saw it fire up instantly for the first time since 1991. Also the alternator was rust siezed so that had to be hammered apart Just wanted a quick clean and it worked amazingly! Also up every door was siezed shut and had broken rods etc. Fixed up all 4 doors and lubricated them so they now work nicely. Looking ahead to panels it will eventually need I bought this and @worldofceri brought it to my door, a true professional and an excellent price! I stripped it of as much reusable parts and the front end for the lse. The neighbours were understanding... And the understanding continued a smidge.... My neighbours are awesome ( I didn't make hardly any noise though) just now need to regain sustained health if possible. Angrydicky, Tickman, spartacus and 18 others 21
worldofceri Posted March 24, 2021 Posted March 24, 2021 I’m amazed at how much you’ve been able to salvage from that shell... And at the speed you work; I received a picture of the remains loaded and off to the weighbridge before I’d even got home! Have another picture or two: Sigmund Fraud, Shite Ron, spartacus and 9 others 12
Jikovron Posted March 31, 2021 Author Posted March 31, 2021 In a fit of needing to be productive , a carport was deemed necessary to be able to function in the rain, so good old facebook market place came up trumps with some massively overkill 6x4 timber for pocket money and 4x2 3m length rafters. First job was to move the proton out the way which wasn't too impossible of a task once filled with fuel, and a decent battery. 2 cars very similar in ethos but so very different under the skin. First up I made some wall mount blocks for the joist rail and bothered to get the router out to tart it up. I had to dig some time team trenches to middle the bricks and expose them for the masonry through bolts. Wall mounts could then tighten up and I found the aggregate dug into and locked the timber to the wall! Then the joist rail could secure into place and the 2 upright post holes were dug, and leveled concrete pads poured at the desired level. Upright to cross bar fitted with M8 stud bar intersecting 20mm rod. Needless stiffening! And it's up there! brownnova, gm, crad and 14 others 17
spartacus Posted March 31, 2021 Posted March 31, 2021 Wow, that's looking great, birdsmouth joints and everything. Impressive, I'll be taking a slow drive-by next week to check it out!
Jikovron Posted March 31, 2021 Author Posted March 31, 2021 1 hour ago, spartacus said: Wow, that's looking great, birdsmouth joints and everything. Impressive, I'll be taking a slow drive-by next week to check it out! Social distanced visitors are always welcome as I'm outside as much as the weather allows, which is partly the reason for the carport haha! Jim Bell and Shite Ron 2
Jim Bell Posted March 31, 2021 Posted March 31, 2021 Impressive erection. What are you doing for the ground man? Jikovron 1
Jikovron Posted March 31, 2021 Author Posted March 31, 2021 27 minutes ago, Jim Bell said: Impressive erection. What are you doing for the ground man? Aye good question, likely will lay flags down as the whole deal is sort of temporary, long term a single and a half garage will take its place so can't really pour concrete down yet. Jim Bell and juular 1 1
captain_70s Posted April 1, 2021 Posted April 1, 2021 Mega progress on the car port, also gaining fame on Facebook spotters pages. Coprolalia, Shite Ron, worldofceri and 5 others 8
Jikovron Posted April 2, 2021 Author Posted April 2, 2021 Aye i can't go anywhere now there are facebook groups for old car spotting, i get alot of screen shots sent to me after every trip further afield! First task today was to joint the crossbar sections properly, 2 M8 studs into 20mm bar and really thick washers did the trick although as seen I didn't line up the side hole properly on the first go, middled it on the second though , the gap is there purely as the timber wants that angle and even 1600kg of M8 compression won't persuade it! I felt the need to run the router around to give a slither of sophistication and class to go with the sort of motor that will be caressed beneath it. So now that the tedious shit is out of the way i can think about what roof material to try and get for pittance and how to sort the 'work/terrace' area wuvvum, Shite Ron, rainagain and 13 others 16
captain_70s Posted April 3, 2021 Posted April 3, 2021 17 hours ago, Jikovron said: So now that the tedious shit is out of the way i can think about what roof material to try and get for pittance Semi rusty, red oxided corrugated sheets obviously. Angrydicky, Jim Bell and Jikovron 3
Jikovron Posted April 8, 2021 Author Posted April 8, 2021 Just a small update, I was scanning around for bargains to complete this and eventually found 8x4 OSB sheet to go up and then subsequently a garage roof that had recently been removed so all in I'm about £230 into it which will go up a smidge due to guttering ,strip light and outdoor socket. Always a fan of the tiny wheel flatbed It snowed heavily whilst I slapped on the preservative but I persevered due to just wanting it done! The osb flew up no bother and similarly the underlay and steel was no issue to shorten a smidge and the stiffness of the metal made it feel very firm underfoot , next up will be to excavate and flag the area under it, by hand in the main! Stanky, captain_70s, Angrydicky and 8 others 11
Jikovron Posted April 15, 2021 Author Posted April 15, 2021 I pulled the hulk into the work arena and was straight away distracted by picking off the vinyl roof and rubbing shitty old glue off the pillars etc, ideally it wants a roof skin but it looks like the one it had will do for now. The car is the wrong way round really as the front is looking terrible compared to the back so ideally hiding that would have been preferable So with this I want to fly through the core of the shell before dealing with the usual accessible outer rot so the interior was first to be evicted. along with the soaking wet sound mat and bitumen coating. The floor is finally dried out and I'm leaving the sill repair till after the floor is sorted as they do retain a decent level of strength till I mercilessly chop them off! Next up, to remove the axle I removed the brake line, anti roll bar, dampers and undid the 8 bolts and nuts holding it in. Was 17mm, now rusted down to a perfect 16mm I forgot the steering column so tried to spread the splined clamp and heat it up but it wasn't having any of it. So it just had to thread through the bulkhead with a level of ignorance and lacking in grace. Getting the axle off allowed the water pipes to drop off also improving access to the metal work. Next up welding prep! Dave_Q, Coprolalia, cort1977 and 9 others 12
Jikovron Posted May 6, 2021 Author Posted May 6, 2021 As the buggy is basically unsaleable and worthless I thought I might aswell tinker on with it as and when, the steering was thought to be a massively faff but actually the saxo rack and quadrants etc all play nicely with each other. The quadrant is a brake pedal as it has a nice pivot point. the rack mount was welded to the chassis rails to initially position the rack with a view that the drag link follows the average arc of the suspension links. Steering column is the saxo up joint, a piece of lawnmower and a m12 bolt with a flange welded on. The steering quadrant pivot got a decent beef up as I predict the thing is likely to be getting its face smashed in rather than a quiet bimble although thinking further a bump stop would be helpful as bottoming the dampers would strain the arms a fair bit. I knocked up a front bumper as it wants a decent location for some D shackles, basically because why not! So as the HDPE 1000litre containers worked out so well previously I picked up 2 inner bottles locally for a tenner, as can be seen when you saw them into a net they are a good 7m² of decent 3mm sheet which cut and shape very easily, I would have used then on a shed roof zero bother! With the front getting resolved I wanted to sort the unfinished rear so back out with the pipe bender and bandsaw to make a bumper and wheel slider rails. Next up will be a roll over cage! Jim Bell, crad, Sigmund Fraud and 3 others 6
Jikovron Posted July 21, 2021 Author Posted July 21, 2021 Proton OTR So the Proton became a full blown proper load of excessive work and I trapped myself into a cycle of obsession with battling against severe fatigue to get it done whilst everything hangs in the balance,,for all those who are healthy and procrastinating,,life's bloody unpredictable and short! , there is a level of reward reaped in that despite now slowly recovering some semblance of function again,,ie walking more than 10m at a time the thing has come back onto the road and the entire family love the thing including me inexplicably, it drives like an 80s mitsubishi with competent smoothness and the typical feather weight precise controls these cars have, the engine is ultra smooth and the response is very lively with the 140bhp unit, even the homebrew driveshafts are happy conduits of torque. Ultimately it has to stay. Genuine clean pass, no advisories as I went through the entire car! This took an inordinate amount of time as I would make up a patch meticulously fit it till it was butted flush and carefully weld it,,then just snooze on the mat for abit. And to think it looked OK initially Sump was loose,,easy fix there really,,just clean it and use sump sealant As the sun sets here,,it could well be the last hurrah,,,but also there may be a recovery too so one way or the other really! Tickman, Steviemillar, wuvvum and 20 others 23
Jim Bell Posted July 22, 2021 Posted July 22, 2021 Hope you've fully committed to keeping it after all that work man. I bet it's mega. Jikovron 1
Jikovron Posted July 23, 2021 Author Posted July 23, 2021 It's become something more than just a crap old proton, people's reaction to it out and about is very positive unexpectedly. I guess mainly as its incredibly unlikely of a car to be invested in including modified, additionally when I took it to a local meet earlier in the week, the very same chap who attempted to MOT the car at kwikfit in 2013 was there too, he was shocked but wholey pleased to see it had survived against the odds and had been through alot of life changes in 8 years! It's a shit old proton,,but to us lot it's our shit old proton! Steviemillar, Tickman, Isopon and 6 others 9
Datsuncog Posted August 23, 2022 Posted August 23, 2022 Just wondering if there's been any progress with the Super Estelle project - or indeed any of your others? Wasn't there an Ital in the mix, or did I just imagine that? Always enjoy looking back over this thread, some top work going on! juular 1
Jikovron Posted August 23, 2022 Author Posted August 23, 2022 5 hours ago, Datsuncog said: Just wondering if there's been any progress with the Super Estelle project - or indeed any of your others? Wasn't there an Ital in the mix, or did I just imagine that? Always enjoy looking back over this thread, some top work going on! Yeah there's been a fair bit over the last year but it's all been complicated by health maladies so I didn't really post much, but I'll do a summary shortly ! BlankFrank, worldofceri, Datsuncog and 5 others 8
Jikovron Posted August 25, 2022 Author Posted August 25, 2022 So a year or so passes by and plenty has gone on for better and worse. Proton: 10,000 miles this year! The driveshaft seemed to be out of balance so I added some jubilee weights ,,however since balancing the wheels there is some residual minor vibration at 70 odd mph (knackered cv boot noted) I made a cheeky towbar of which I should have just bought one than mess about adapting one that looked about right Bonnet catch failed at high enough speed to snap one hinge and wrap the bonnet around the passenger A pillar,,all OK except the windscreen which was subsequently replaced The engine was feeling abit off so I found the engine light feed and wired it into the dash , but that was revealing nowt! I reckoned the fuel pump was struggling to feed the bigger engine, so swapped that for the gti unit however that didn't help either, and similarly the fuel regulator was passing at expected pressure so by then I was abit stumped So checked the cam timing which revealed almost a tooth out, but oddly not a whole tooth. So a loose crank bolt allowed the keyway to fret away the key, ended up welding it and filing it back into shape, fixed! next up was the rather long ignored cv and rack boot, only took about 20mins or so for a change brake pipes were looking incredibly poor so they got replaced, it involved a whole host of tools, strong language and a 3m length of 5mm bore clear poly pipe. I noticed instantly when this blew out all its oil as the car felt skittish when cornering to the right, so I phoned about for new ones but most places claimed their suppliers didn't have them, yet one tried KYB directly who had stock of them, so swapped both sides as the better of the 2 dampers was in poor condition also the window wouldn't wind on either side due to the tabs rotting off the glass grab thing so just tacked them back together , makes a big difference being able to open windows without them falling out of the runners The next engine,,at some stage anon, plenty to plan to get that in given its a VW engine That's a sort of abridged year behind d the wheel of that car, it's basically been a decent all round thing, enjoyable and easy to drive with reasonable reliability all in. BlankFrank, SmokinWaffle, juular and 10 others 13
Jikovron Posted August 25, 2022 Author Posted August 25, 2022 So the Skoda has been a slow burner but again this has been spread over the whole year roughly As can be noted the front end was a total mess, it just fell to bits without any disassembly , a few kicks saw it all fall out. And indeed the metal just kept being cut away till it was looking completely bollocked the donor floor needed some work after it was blasted The boot floor and rails fitted OK due to coming from a similar year car, the press tools where changed a fair bit as the steel thickness and pressings were continuously updated through the estelle production run particularly the mk1 and super estelles surprisingly that was a straight forward task and getting it in wasn't all that bad By this stage the technique was in place, yes there's no ribs but no shits were given due to cost considerations , flat sheet is cheap! I used a copious amount of Zinga zinc coating , bloody expensive given it was 53quid for 750ml All that rammel needs copied/repaired and fitted back in, but need to build up enthusiasm again really the questionable 80s bumper was in bits so I thought I'd see if fibre glass was a worthy option and it is , if you buy the correct resin for the catalyst, I had to redo the whole deal but got there the 2nd time! So that's roughly up to date, 12months condensed down as per the proton dome, puddlethumper, BlankFrank and 10 others 13
juular Posted August 25, 2022 Posted August 25, 2022 Phenomenal work going on there. Do you rate the zinga? I'm doing the Amazon using copious amounts of it, so far it seems better than electrox.
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