Asimo Posted February 8, 2020 Posted February 8, 2020 On 2/4/2020 at 11:25 PM, PhilA said: Brake soup. Phil Having an olfactory-flashback 50 years to Pops cooking oily Zephyr brake shoes in Daz. Yuck. If I ever have to do this, I'll use the dishwasher. Joey spud, stonedagain and PhilA 3
PhilA Posted February 12, 2020 Author Posted February 12, 2020 Made a warning light panel to put under the dash. Needed more than one light. Going to make another one for a couple other warnings. Phil paulplom, scdan4 and LightBulbFun 3
PhilA Posted February 12, 2020 Author Posted February 12, 2020 Bulbs for warning lights and go no go feelers have arrived. If time permits I'll wire up the generator and oil pressure lights. Phil LightBulbFun and paulplom 2
Zelandeth Posted February 12, 2020 Posted February 12, 2020 What are those warning lights from? They seem strangely familiar but I can't put my finger on where from.
PhilA Posted February 12, 2020 Author Posted February 12, 2020 36 minutes ago, Zelandeth said: What are those warning lights from? They seem strangely familiar but I can't put my finger on where from. Nortel DMS-100 telephony switch warning panel.
Zelandeth Posted February 12, 2020 Posted February 12, 2020 2 hours ago, PhilA said: Nortel DMS-100 telephony switch warning panel. Given the plethora of kit from that era I've played with over the years, wouldn't surprise me in the slightest if I've seen one. Used to get a lot of good interesting teardown candidates and parts donors from the eBay "department of interesting, broken, local and collection only stuff" back around 2000 or so! PhilA 1
PhilA Posted February 13, 2020 Author Posted February 13, 2020 Borrowed a letter punches set to see if I could impress into the plastic lens the meaning of the light. Put a bit of black paint on it then wiped it off. Um. Well. They're harder to line up than I thought. Lit up (had to dial the exposure way back else it just bleached out the image) it's legible but still looks a little bit too "homebrew", so I think I'll just go with colors and no legend. Phil scdan4 and Joey spud 2
somewhatfoolish Posted February 13, 2020 Posted February 13, 2020 How thick is the plastic lens? I've had some luck bodging legends for illuminated push buttons on control panels where either wear and tear or enthusiastic but dunderheaded use of inappropriate solvents for cleaning has erased the original; use Paint/Draw/whatever to knock up the necessary legend, print out and either a) iron on the outside(printing mirrored natch, must be a laser printer obvs) b) cut out and slip inside betwixt lens and lamp(printing on transparency film may help with brightness). lacquer or varnish might help make the iron-on option more durable. PhilA 1
Zelandeth Posted February 13, 2020 Posted February 13, 2020 Dunno, but that looks pretty in keeping with the sort of thing that you'd have seen in terms of the finish on retrofitted kit back in period to me. Probably look a lot better on the dash in the car than under careful scrutiny on the workbench. PhilA 1
PhilA Posted February 13, 2020 Author Posted February 13, 2020 Off, they're moderately inconspicuous. On, they're bright enough to be noticed. (Camera doesn't like the contrast). I need to finish running the oil pressure light wire, it's just pulled through the firewall and lain down with the bare end twisted around the switch terminal. Works though Phil scdan4, paulplom and Joey spud 3
hairnet Posted February 13, 2020 Posted February 13, 2020 Nice Ps I was gonna say I was in your time zone but apparently I'm not the plows are a clue....... PhilA 1
PhilA Posted February 14, 2020 Author Posted February 14, 2020 I stamped meaning into the lamps. Phil Zelandeth, LightBulbFun, scdan4 and 7 others 10
PhilA Posted February 14, 2020 Author Posted February 14, 2020 I can't go to Ihop any more. Long story.
hairnet Posted February 15, 2020 Posted February 15, 2020 Got beeped far too many times for the thing that Phil has specially on his dash........to avoid said beeping Only thing seen if interest apart from a fire truck giving it beans thru traffic today a early mid 60s ford or Chevy four door had four eye front like the fairlane @PhilA was looking at but driving so no pic I kept forgetting
PhilA Posted February 20, 2020 Author Posted February 20, 2020 Box of goodies arrived. Freaking hotrod parts, woo! It'll drive like a Corvette now! Phil mercedade, LightBulbFun, GrumpiusMaximus and 2 others 5
PhilA Posted February 20, 2020 Author Posted February 20, 2020 Pulled distributor out. Stripped it down enough to be able to fit the new piece in. Decided at that point to clean it down. Painted it, it's currently drying. Continuum later. Phil LightBulbFun, GrumpiusMaximus and DeeJay 3
PhilA Posted February 21, 2020 Author Posted February 21, 2020 That's complicated to get set up. Worth it, though. Runs really nicely now. That's not bad pick-up for an old sidevalve. Phil BlankFrank, somewhatfoolish, LightBulbFun and 11 others 14
PhilA Posted February 23, 2020 Author Posted February 23, 2020 The steering wheel logo had annoyed me since I got the car, the plastic is all crazed and the color was all gone from the sun. I figured out how the horn button came apart, you can see how faded the red behind the chief there is. I bent the 4 tabs holding him on, naturally being brass they all fractured. Cleaned the lacquer off, discovering a thin place in the chrome (go figure) Cleaned up and masked off the pieces not to be painted with fine line tape. Threw the dregs of the red lacquer can at it. Managed 3 coats before it ran out. Turns out that was just enough. Drilled the post holding the chief out up the middle, tapped a thread, cut a screw down and used that to hold him in place with a shakeproof washer. Nice result. Quite happy with that, looks like the factory effort. Rubbed down and polished the plastic up as best as I could get it to go. It's still really badly crazed but it's a bit clearer than it was. Looks much better in the car though. Matches the rest of the badges now. Phil somewhatfoolish, egg, hairnet and 12 others 15
somewhatfoolish Posted February 23, 2020 Posted February 23, 2020 Time to play with vacforming and replace the dome too! LightBulbFun 1
PhilA Posted February 24, 2020 Author Posted February 24, 2020 I had a go at seeing what the ignition system was doing. I wound about 30 turns of wire around plug wire 1 and terminated the end with an LED, and put my neon spark tester in line. Bright orange flash when the plug is fired but also a lot of energy being sent down the wire from other spark positions. I think new wires and new plugs should help, I think the insulation on them is going a bit soft. Phil LightBulbFun 1
Asimo Posted February 24, 2020 Posted February 24, 2020 What is happening here? Does one contact breaker open the circuit and then the other close the circuit? If so, is that to allow independent adjustment of gap and dwell?
PhilA Posted February 24, 2020 Author Posted February 24, 2020 58 minutes ago, Asimo said: Does one contact breaker open the circuit and then the other close the circuit? If so, is that to allow independent adjustment of gap and dwell? Yes. There is a slight angle difference around the cam between the two sets of points. They are both wired together (green busbar). The dwell is variable by setting the gap differently on one versus the other but they do close-close.....open-open so the leading one closes the circuit and begins to charge the coil, the second one closes a little later, which would be the normal start-charge time for the coil because it is still riding the trailing edge of the cam and is still pushed open. The period in which the points need to be open for the coil to generate a spark is miniscule compared to how long they remain pushed open for across a symmetrical lobe of the cam. The first one opens (about 20 degrees early) but the second one is still closed, then the second one opens at the point the plug needs to fire. The overall result is that the circuit is broken for a much smaller amount of time, just at the point a spark is required, and it is closed for much longer than it would otherwise be with a single set of points, allowing the coil to charge up longer- it does take a finite time to reach saturation. So, if you look at it the circuit would normally be operated like this, where +++++ is circuit closed and _______ is circuit open and *** where spark occurs. +++++++++++++_**____________++++++++++_**____________++++++++++ for single points +++++++++++++_**___+++++++++++++++++_**___+++++++++++++++++ for dual points So, for high RPM situations it means the coil has a longer period to charge and saturate; at low RPM that isn't really an issue but one set of points takes inrush current and one set takes discharge so it spreads the wear out significantly. Phil Asimo, mat_the_cat, mercedade and 2 others 3 2
PhilA Posted March 1, 2020 Author Posted March 1, 2020 I have a mysterious benefactor. This arrived in the mail today. It looks fantastic. Phil xtriple, Yoss, somewhatfoolish and 15 others 18
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