Jump to content

Twin-Cam's Motoring Maladies: Povvo Rover Metro Restoration, Austin Metro 1.3L, BMW E46 325i


Recommended Posts

Posted
48 minutes ago, Eyersey1234 said:

How many miles has Melvin done? 

A smidge under 70k. I'll probably hit it within the next week.

Posted
11 minutes ago, Twin-Cam said:

A smidge under 70k. I'll probably hit it within the next week.

Not many for a car of his age, mines about to hit 201k

Posted
17 hours ago, Eyersey1234 said:

Not many for a car of his age, mines about to hit 201k

Not many at all, although many Metros were just used to pootle to the shops.

I've done 11k since the last MOT.

Posted
25 minutes ago, Twin-Cam said:

Not many at all, although many Metros were just used to pootle to the shops.

I've done 11k since the last MOT.

That's true, my stepdads E reg Metro City had about 55k on the clock at 10 years old

  • 4 years later...
Posted

*Gulp* it's been four years since I was last here, and for some strange reason, I've suddenly felt the need to update this.

As of the last update, 'Melvin' was my daily driver. I was commuting everyday on an 80-mile round trip, and the car was just flawless. Perfectly and utterly reliable up to the start of the pandemic. After that, the mileage cooled off, but down to Devon and Portsmouth, up to John O'Groats, that little car did it all with minimal fuss. I can wholeheartedly say that a K-Series Metro remains a perfectly useable and acceptable everyday car. An A-Series one, as I've learned, not so much!

Until October 2022, Melvin remained my primary car, until the rust finally began to take hold. After rebuilding the brakes that summer, I decided to start picking at the rear wheel arches. It turns out that a previous owner had bodged the hell out of them, and the filler was finally breaking free from what was left of the steel. Additionally, the offside rear inner wheel arch strengthener panel had turned to dust. With just a screwdriver, I could touch the rear tyre from inside the boot. The funny thing, however, is that the car remained mechanically perfect. That little K-Series just purred along all the way up to the MOT expiring - mileage: 83,000. Naturally, I wasn't even going to entertain a tester with it, so I took the car off the road. The rest of the car is really quite good. It's just the outer rear arches on both sides and the inner arch on the driver's side. Melvin being my first and most beloved car, however, I decided I wanted to restore him. Not repair, and certainly not bodge, but to spend an obscene amount of money to secure this car's indefinite future. Is it financially worth it? Christ no. But I love this little car.

And so the strip-down begins. 

I've been saving as much money as I can to fund this ridiculous passion project, hence two years and not even a full strip down, but next year things should begin progressing.

IMG_5086.jpg.3af368077b509dee1551f76da850533d.jpg

IMG_5114.JPG.78bff786f4176ee51469f971f745f244.JPG

 

IMG_9406.JPG.cef9635bf3675c5c128aa0ddefc50d7c.JPG

IMG_9410.JPG.69f00a4bf0138ffb8c76f29adcfda649.JPG

IMG_9409.JPG.a581d1f597f1d6ae1f98433e78907f62.JPG

IMG_9413.JPG.8f1c44279b1225d23d14df08ff72b2b0.JPG

IMG_9417.JPG.166f80dc9386c4104d43b057df1f34c2.JPG

IMG_9418.JPG.5b8e17cb7d6ebb8e2de322a2f0494210.JPG

IMG_E9414.JPG.18a4b63e42408ea34394725454e2a4a7.JPG

IMG_3185.JPG.41e64efd7b4617d346ecf97e3d5160b6.JPGIMG_5175.JPG.f6f19620c39165facc5e5e85a936029b.JPG

IMG_E9416.JPG

Posted

While I'm here, I'd also like to introduce you to my level of nerdery. While bored the other week, I stumbled across a service invoice from what would have been my local Rover dealer. I'm far too young to remember all this, but I embarked on a mission to faithfully recreate the blank invoice, resized for A4 paper and my printer's dreadfully large margins.

I'm a proper weirdo.

BalmforthsServiceInvoice.jpg.f099ec4ada2cfb496f4cf9d1af8e9631.jpg

  • Like 8
Posted

Nothing strange about being a weirdo! 

I really enjoy the tinkering videos and heartily approve of the nerdery 🙂

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Posted
Just now, Dan302 said:

Nothing strange about being a weirdo! 

I really enjoy the tinkering videos and heartily approve of the nerdery 🙂

Thank you kindly! The YouTube thing has been totally abandoned of late as I've been busy doing other things. This weekend, however, Twin-Cam is back. Metro videos coming in three weeks.

  • Like 3
Posted

Rather than create a new thread, I thought I’d bore you all with my other Metro-shaped pain in the arse. This little one is called Melody, and she’s a 1987 Austin Metro 1.3L. She was donated to me by a viewer in October 2021, and since then, she’s had a fair amount of love…

The day of collection!

IMG_7460.jpeg.9212e51efad5e945048881fce5a833a3.jpeg

IMG_7461.jpeg.8b08f34e646ce677988de94c732f0a3a.jpeg

IMG_7473.jpeg.045f809a14b70996366743fada066400.jpeg

The first wash.

IMG_7491.jpeg.a9fb352e656b6f57f232a9aa8c377838.jpeg….And a flat battery. The alternator was knackered so the battery started to drain once it went dark. 
One new alternator, please!

IMG_7629.jpeg.5f492193758406b675a566fa5d1f40c6.jpeg

And some more driving.IMG_8112.jpeg.bd7e3aaf07253c28e5df14cb2dbb02c8.jpeg

IMG_8385.jpeg.2f9d0be05e8ecfb6fbfe0dea11cf3d01.jpeg

The nearside front wheel bearing was noisy, so I decided to buy a care package and do all four, the ball joints, and the front brakes. Word of advice though: buy Timken wheel bearings. Mini Spares/Sport own brand are made of cheese. I went through eight of the damn things in total.

IMG_8494.jpeg.e9b8af7330066669dbf2b2ba6eb29cb6.jpeg

IMG_8654.jpeg.0785d480d92f16d355a69945dff977ee.jpeg

The pepperpot alloys aren’t original. It would have had metrics from factory. So as the peppers are a cliche in Metroland and this set are nasty, I bought some flashy gold wheels.9F8989A7-C1E7-4959-B1BF-4016418C59AD.jpeg.e252005b0e88a88fa2ce3e7cafbe8dae.jpeg

Before fitting, however, I met Melody’s twin!

IMG_8643.jpeg.5e095a3e314d77fcfc57e9b51b5f4621.jpeg

A few problems remained, however, including a leaky thermostat housing that was easily sorted.

IMG_8794.jpeg.6caa7b377a4364cfaa942e59f9e8bbe0.jpeg

Still hadn’t serviced her though, and what was in the oil I did not enjoy…

IMG_9287.jpeg.b21245c6f9619186bf6c1b1e3ea22f87.jpeg

IMG_9303.jpeg.c8ce9f0f8103fec7bca2171b2dc27d09.jpeg

IMG_9314.jpeg.b7bf0ba9c06781844ed15433ceb613ad.jpeg

IMG_9316.jpeg.820591e34acb2d9d9d378057238d9359.jpeg

IMG_9317.jpeg.20979543cdd794c6caad8db3d08070a2.jpeg

Funny fluid suspension doings.

IMG_9327.jpeg.46b68d441aa2bdc2796bd0afba708c83.jpegIMG_9509.jpeg.22d27735235c08ca8f78d3b5f417fb15.jpeg

But in all this work, I somehow hadn’t spotted this hole in the sill, on which it failed the MOT!

IMG_9770.jpeg.0493c59dc7676a790e73934938b3c41f.jpeg

Once patched up, however, I continued tinkering, replacing the original bus-size steering wheel with a Mk1 MG unit, complete with Austin centre.

IMG_1151.jpeg.9ec03551d3618dfa0b060e260295dd47.jpeg

Met another friend:

IMG_1259.jpeg.b4231c9bd0fae39a7da4d181f458f0d3.jpeg

And went out for some beauty shots:

IMG_1465.jpeg.a40e2ce4fce1e59c8c167fad3ed69856.jpeg

She doesn’t like the rain.

IMG_1539.jpeg.3c41c642783021a013632db838a0095a.jpeg

Finally, some polishing really brought up the faded Targa Red paint.

IMG_2087.jpeg.89829af20d7a5efe07f60b79ad39b35f.jpeg

IMG_2105.jpeg.6ca6bd57177487b870d66e1b95f5e9a4.jpeg

IMG_2224.jpeg.dd362c7b44120d2e800a003372a80d5d.jpeg

And I finally fitted the wheels!

IMG_2264.jpeg.5e39965d66675bbf0fdc2d097fbd0a10.jpeg

To complement them, I replaced the broken seats and dull carpets with bright red MG stuff!

IMG_2391.jpeg.671b9748f8bcf4ba01129c16c94f9456.jpeg

IMG_2396.jpeg.77b0976cca02a958949ced021f55a7b8.jpeg

IMG_2954.jpeg.ec72ee79edae401cc6974c2db015c500.jpeg

There’s plenty more to come though!

Posted

But after all that love, she started to make some bad noises. My fears from the oil change had been proved correct, and the gearbox was not very happy, so she came apart!

IMG_4325.jpeg.b5dbae19978175741210a550625f7fbf.jpeg

IMG_4351.jpeg.386074193b5b9c9cac7e209b380b6270.jpeg

IMG_4363.jpeg.a57dcbd33183d6707c6b8708f00eed76.jpeg

IMG_4406.jpeg.d41fa566cc092d73018b0aa2b4fa2e9e.jpeg

IMG_4496.jpeg.d96b52fb0082f659b0f7f0f63919b1d1.jpeg

IMG_4500.jpeg.738fbefdbccafdabacc9e60de41d8bf9.jpeg

The differential was fortunately fine, as that was my first guess. Instead, many bearings were FUBAR, plus the synchros were virtually none existent. 
With a good clean and a raft of new parts, it all went back together.

IMG_4558.jpeg.1e48383bfa8a2f85c464865312eac327.jpeg

IMG_4799.jpeg.d0f3bc64e36f39a9bca7df9252fc9cd1.jpeg

IMG_5125.jpeg.7a43f9678018eca9c550204057f86b83.jpeg

IMG_5139.jpeg.e39e5a88014d248dc4cac44353025f2f.jpeg

I painted the engine. 998cc Metros had yellow blocks. 1275s like Melody were painted red.

IMG_5153.jpeg.053ba37c19cfc64db8cdd79a57e66779.jpeg

I also fitted a Maniflow exhaust for more NVH.

IMG_5168.jpeg.42a9869cce9134ae527111750b0668da.jpeg

IMG_5171.jpeg.9a86cb8a5bc5e2bd5f18ca60688980fc.jpeg

And then all back together (after having to chase out a few threads in the transfer casing!)

IMG_5176.jpeg.70c9e75045e288564afbfa28f71a7c8f.jpeg

IMG_5312.jpeg.7205ff3ec40dde02770403bf2ebc55cf.jpeg

IMG_5430.jpeg.bd062eb26eab95481ff254e8e390619a.jpeg

IMG_5435.jpeg.7145a2084ede57ad9b6cdc404578cccc.jpeg

While pondering my actions, a friend invited me to pilot one of the display cars for the Metro Owners’ Club’s NEC stand.

The black MG 1300 was mine, a very late car with the high filler neck and steel wheels.

IMG_5478.jpeg.7534ef2543d39fca22ae8fdff9830924.jpeg

IMG_5487.jpeg.c2f8006c3016ebe7274b432fc9f5092a.jpeg

And then I bought another car - an E46 325i!

IMG_6399.jpeg.504046c9947de3527154bae9b52f9eda.jpeg

IMG_6451.jpeg.4cb02ef66b6d4e4fd6995529a0389144.jpeg

IMG_6452.jpeg.700f977763c58ffeef4a8c80ec0fdeab.jpeg

But finally, Melody came back together.

IMG_8262.jpeg.da8c575e8a2d16bee5c43bbebceae8a0.jpeg

IMG_8259.jpeg.d32b3090583ebc8aab70d6791cbdc98b.jpeg
Plus a new stainless J-pipe, a reproduction part from the owners club.

IMG_8598.jpeg.6928e94bf8eba12145c478b07f31aa7b.jpeg

IMG_8633.jpeg.3ef0a4b7484d257a2dffb86b1e820cc1.jpeg
And there she was. Fixed and back on the road!

IMG_8547.jpeg

IMG_8546.jpeg

IMG_8545.jpeg

Posted

I appear to have accidentally attached same pictures from the NEC that year. 
Some more BMW first, which is proving relatively efficient. But anyway, onwards to more Melody!

IMG_8982.jpeg.4edadbf140887f3a62348019a7224473.jpeg
IMG_9124.jpeg.90c04cc0d0ab0d1a6018227eef32053b.jpeg

IMG_9140.jpeg.879f35e4afdaa5ca92ede03126b8b2e2.jpeg

I found her an original tape deck. Her factory radio was MW/LW only, so useless today.

IMG_9147.jpeg.25d96612c654d4041f5ad8817bf54ae5.jpeg

I also found some *ultra rare* NOS fabric floor mats for Melvin. I’m very proud of these.

IMG_9521.jpeg.32ba13345d44ac3ea87540162dcf0e3c.jpeg

Then was a big day - Hydragas day!

Ian and Dawn Kennedy came along to fit some regassed suspension units, taking away Melody’s originals for refurbishment and use on another Metro.

IMG_9907.jpeg.89c6c0b619b45df4da297926992ceb32.jpeg

IMG_9898.jpeg.aa514146ac4868e4e56506df28e0fa74.jpeg

IMG_9909.jpeg.2ca062dc774255b574bc114213e2d0ca.jpeg

Next up was an issue I’ve needed to address for ages - the steering rack.

These are not available, and inner tie rods are rare, but this barely used rack tightened it up sufficiently.

IMG_2392.jpeg.cefa5dc6da76e3067b3cdf2b38482324.jpeg
IMG_2393.jpeg.8dc9eea07b3b2a595e568983761eadcb.jpeg

The final piece in the puzzle lay under the bonnet. She’s never run perfectly, and since I installed the silly exhaust, she’s needed a good tune. Enter the legendary AC Dodd to recurve the distributor, shave the carburettor needle, and get the emissions dialled in just right. This car now *pulls*. From 13 mph in top gear, she now pulls cleanly and strongly all the way up to speeds I’m not going to divulge on here, all in a stock 1275cc engine fitted with the economy camshaft!

IMG_2460.jpeg.a14bf24c482a603b074f063334f18dc5.jpeg

IMG_2462.jpeg.25fa946ea343c8db6e8ec92bf29ade94.jpeg

IMG_2479.jpeg.dca752cf97a574a097a6cdbbf3408ee5.jpeg

IMG_2483.jpeg.f53099eb7d60343ec134563e0a10180c.jpeg

IMG_2496.jpeg.2e4dcedf09fca0884f84e52ab57d6d13.jpeg

IMG_2510.jpeg.c8983348047173b8c09f717751634167.jpeg

And here’s Melody’s original dizzy, being recurved ready for use on someone else’s A-Series.

IMG_2515.jpeg.f478d96ca392b8e9d416c994f7647b65.jpeg

I’ve since scored some genuine accessory wheels. These are appallingly rare and already, seven people have messaged me with offers. I’m not selling. Need to get them refurbished before fitting.

IMG_2691.jpeg.47a06814fb975d72182eafb77b094bb6.jpeg

The headlamps had always been disappointing as the reflectors had gone matte, and the bolts that go into the wheel arches had naturally seized.

Mk2 Metro headlamps are NLA, but Mk1 headlamps are everywhere NOS. The only difference is the lens on the front, so some surgery ensued…

IMG_3640.jpeg.585f8c0c525596a97040e4f8db7bef40.jpeg

IMG_3643.jpeg.150d3a26422e7a86c5129ede4b4454fd.jpeg

And finally before some more driving fun - fitting a new instrument cluster to fix a nagging speedometer issue she’s had ever since I collected her.

IMG_4352.jpeg.4fe780ce2312e9fe76257e36522f3190.jpeg

4E8AFBF4-28AF-473A-92D1-3FDA19E9D9D4.jpeg.1c182e54c4e8996ae2e28b181b67ee20.jpeg

IMG_4575.jpeg.5f4cd9ce18d0affa2731973f88eb4349.jpeg

Posted
2 hours ago, Twin-Cam said:

The headlamps had always been disappointing as the reflectors had gone matte, and the bolts that go into the wheel arches had naturally seized.

 

Mk2 Metro headlamps are NLA, but Mk1 headlamps are everywhere NOS. The only difference is the lens on the front, so some surgery ensued…

IMG_3640.jpeg.585f8c0c525596a97040e4f8db7bef40.jpeg

 

10 minutes at gas mark 4? Or just until it hurts to pick it up?😁

Posted
8 hours ago, Eyersey1234 said:

Which is your favourite of the 2 Metros?

Oh, Melvin, the white one. No doubt about it. An A-Series car is an entertaining curiosity. Something fun that feels elderly. The K-Series ones are just brilliant drivers' cars, wrapped in an elderly body shell. If I could find one, I'd have a BRG 1.4 SL in a heart beat.

  • Like 3
Posted
7 hours ago, somewhatfoolish said:

10 minutes at gas mark 4? Or just until it hurts to pick it up?😁

The adhesive is bloody stubborn stuff! In all honesty, just long enough to be able to chisel through the adhesive. It's very easy to start melting the housing.

  • Like 1
  • Twin-Cam changed the title to Twin-Cam's Motoring Adventures - Povvo Rover Metro Restoration, Austin Metro 1.3L, BMW E46 325i
Posted

After three weeks of incredible faff, the 46 has a new MOT.

Wheel bearing and drop link weren't surprising at all. The front end sounded and felt like a cement mixer in town. But the SRS fault was a total ballache. It showed as the driver's belt pre-tensioner being faulty, but it was fine, as was the wiring. The airbag module itself was at fault, but it took the useless repair company two goes to get it fixed. 

Anyway, it's back working now, and my ears can relax again after gunning the Austin up and down motorways. I'd forgotten just how hateful the clutch delay valve in these is. Maybe I should look into bypassing it. And installing that tape deck I bought for it. Either way, the dream E39 530i Touring will be automatic, so I might leave alone. I'm dreaming of Oxford Green and a light interior...

DSC00771.JPG.5f66d66d0920fc8c58b3a0ec7d0d54b0.JPG

DSC00858.JPG.a41e742d9ef934fa8b0344a0cf8c7425.JPG

  • Like 3
  • Twin-Cam changed the title to Twin-Cam's Motoring Maladies: Povvo Rover Metro Restoration, Austin Metro 1.3L, BMW E46 325i
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Eeek. We're getting dangerously close to the engine having to come out.

This week on Melvin, I started by stripping out all the glass. I simply cut the seals as only the windscreen seal was in a good enough condition to reuse, and all seals are available as reproductions now. You'll be pleased to know that I didn't drop any of the glass, and because I'm a nerd, only the rear screen will be reused. The windscreen is a Pilkington-branded replacement, installed by the previous owner in 2016, which ain't good enough for me! I've sourced an original, date-correct Triplex screen, which will be going in its place. I've also managed to find an incredibly rare set of non-tinted pop-out rear quarters, which after some remedial work on the frames will be going on the back. Therefore, if anyone needs a Metro windscreen or rear side windows, then give me a shout.

IMG_5607.JPG.db1c8def0b22e26285e10624cf7e9963.JPG

With the glass out of the way, I decided to wear a Metro headlining as a dress. I didn't worry about tearing it as it was already torn around the sunroof, so this was dispatched of quickly. It is a shame that vinyl headliners are no longer available. Unless I come across a NOS one, it's fabric in the future. I have to say, I was quite pleased with the condition of the roof and the support rails, but this is all by the by. The sunroof is a dealer-fit aftermarket unit, which I'm not happy with, and again, I've sourced a perfect roof skin with a factory sunroof. Sure, it's a massive job for the sake of a sunroof, but I'm me. Doing the entire roof skin will actually be easier than either filling the hole or cutting further and welding in just the sunroof section from the new roof skin. No bodyshop in the world could get the contours just right. 

IMG_5609.JPG.614e7ef09964020de85439c933b1c914.JPG

IMG_5623.JPG.127a0ed8c8d5d4ab13629085d44ce031.JPG

The headlining was the next job because I need to get the tailgate off, the bolts for which are hidden behind the headlining. With me needing to keep the garage clear for the day, the conservatory wound up looking rather scrap yard like. Safe to say I wasn't popular that evening. Regardless, there's no significant rot to speak of.

IMG_5618.JPG.edb44c8c05ba990154db5ea91ecd2027.JPG

IMG_5611.JPG.8c87dfd34124fc690f1bac02b471d520.JPG

IMG_5615.JPG.e44d09a6bf0996716305e1b056b25e12.JPG

IMG_5616.JPG.ee5ce5037475b57beb6981289ea1b190.JPG

Your reminder to label everything! I didn't run the offside tailgate wiring back through the shell as it all needs de-pinning. I didn't feel up to doing that at the time, so we moved on.

IMG_5621.JPG.48b8648b97f9a31586516c644d988a72.JPG

IMG_5622.JPG.d50580ce8a69a710fc3676994db908bf.JPG

They took my fooqing eyes!

IMG_5625.JPG.513cefb4ba0889dbbdb3a06933dac92d.JPG

The final job for the day was off camera - the fuse box. This means the wiring is all loose, so with some de-pinning and once I have the heater ducting out of the way, I can just remove the loom. As I mentioned at the start though, I think it's engine time next!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...