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Enfield 8000 1970's Electric Car, Second Car Acquired


coalnotdole
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On 3/2/2021 at 4:37 PM, Will on Syros said:

A lovely little car.  I just bought an Enfield 8000 myself and it's getting a restoration; fortunately it's in a bit better condition that thi syellow/orange one.  How is the restoration going?

I've noticed that a lot of people think these cars were made on the Isle of Wight...but only a very few were..less than 10.   Manufacturing Enfields at the Isle of Wight factory was stopped in 1973after an industrial dispute, and Giannis Goulandris, the owner of Enfield Automtive, shipped production of the car to the town of Ermoupoli on the island of Syros where they were made up until 1976.  They were then sent back to the Isle of Wight just to have the batteries fitted and to be sold as they were not road legal vehicles on Greece.  I've lived on Syros for 4 years now and the Enfield is a BIG deal here. The Prime Minister even had the one from the museum here taken to Athens last year so he could stand by it in a press announcement about electric cars.   It was the first mass produced electric vehicle...so is a bit of automotive history...and of the roughly 120 made, fewer than 15, so far as I can tell, are still working or currently being restored

Attached are some photos...the factory where they were made was a supermarket until a couple of years ago and is currently being used as a storage building for the Industrial Museum in the town.  The group photo shows Goulandris in white overalls and the workforce at the factory when the first Enfield was finished in October 1973.  The other 3 photos are the only ones I have of inside the factory.

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Really interesting to read that. They certainly are intriguing little things. The fact your PM dragged one out of long-term hibernation speaks volumes too! 

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5 hours ago, coalnotdole said:

Hi Will, Interesting to see some photos of work on the car - I was offered it and the spares package when it came up for sale and although it seemed very good value for the money I felt it would have a negative impact on my chances of actually finishing this one or my other various projects!.

The BEI logo is interesting - do you know anything about its history?

I'll try and sort out an update to this thread at some point soon as theres been some small bits of progress with the enfield.

 

Dave

Well, I'm glad you declined to buy :)

I've no idea about BEI....I'm trying to find out. This car, like yours, is one of the later ones, so likely not one of those that went to the Southern Electricity Council...but the E could well stand for Electric(ity). I'll let you know when and if I do myself.

It would be good to see how your own is progressing 

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5 hours ago, Dick Longbridge said:

Really interesting to read that. They certainly are intriguing little things. The fact your PM dragged one out of long-term hibernation speaks volumes too! 

Here he is...Mitsotakis, Greek PM, announcing last March some new initiatives to promote electric cars in Greece.  Charging points in this country are a rarity, so there will need to be a big spend to improve that.

 

mitsotakis-1-1 (1).jpg

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On 8/3/2020 at 7:17 PM, barrett said:

Amazing! I was aware of this car from various photos posted online, and even though I've never seen it in person it is one of my favourite bits of street furniture of all time. Seeing shit like that (well, nothing that good) parked up on the actual street is the sort of thing that drew me to this forum 10 years ago or whatever. There is something incredibly reassuring that in this current age of homogeneity and increasing NIMBYism, there are still weird old cars littering the roads, collecting moss and detritus and making boring old cunts tut with disapproval all over the land.

It's equally sad when these things disappear, as the one single thing that makes a boring suburban road in the West Midlands has now been removed, but the best possible outcome is that the car enters preservation with somebody on this forum so I can track its future progress. Lovely, heartwarming stuff. One million likes.

Well said.  My brother often says that the streets are full of people driving "invisible euro-boxes".

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Well there's been some small progress on the Enfield,

 

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Rear trailing arm and panhard rod removed to allow sourcing of replacement bushes

 

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Shotblasted

 

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Had a bit of a struggle sourcing bushes for the panhard rod as they're no longer available from metalastik/trelleborg, eventually managed to find they're also used on a lotus europa and one of the lotus specialists has had them remanufactured but only lists them using the lotus part number.

 

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Trailing arm bushes were easier to source although seemingly only available with crimped ends now

 

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Conical lotus bushes fitted into the newly primed panhard rod

I've bought new bolts and hardware so the plan will be to refit the trailing arm and panhard rod I've already cleaned up, then remove the other trailing arms one or two at a time and shot blast and rebush them. I can't remove them all at once as disconnecting the prop shaft and getting the axle out is a job that's going to have to wait until i have space to get the car in the workshop and can drop the motor out of the chassis.

 

Cheers for reading!

Dave

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As the enfield seemed to do quite a poor job of keeping the rain out even before I removed the rear glass in order to take the wing off it seemed like getting it somewhere reasonably dry to live while it awaits its turn in the workshop would be sensible. 

One metal shed off facebay later....

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Its somewhat a snug fit!

 

 

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There was just about enough space for me to drill out the spot welds and remove the rotted channel section from under the side window

 

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This is would be my first attempt at making curved flanges, I've bought a vintage edwards jenny roller off eBay to try and form the curved section

 

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However my first test piece wasn't much of a success!

 

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Rollers as supplied with the swager/jenny roller - the stepped lower roller only seems to work if flanging really thin metal of less than half a mm. I made up a new lower roller without the step out of a bit of delrin pressed onto a steel shaft.

 

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Channel section folded up and marked out with measurements from the original section to try and replicate the curve - as the bottom roller of the swager is too big to fit inside the channel i had to only fold the sides to 45 degrees, then swage the flanges before folding the sides to 90 degrees on the flypress.

 

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Rolling the swage.

 

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And the end result after folding the sides to 90 degrees on the flypress - the whole thing is as wonky as a donkeys hind leg

 

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As you can just about see bothe faces of the channel have ended up curved whereas the face on the right should be straight and just the flanged edges curved. 

I chalked this one up as a fail and vowed to try again with a different approach!

 

 

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After the resounding failure of my first attempt at enfield body support sections I decided to try and remove as many of the possible causes as possible - I think the fact I could only fold the channel section to 45 degrees in order to be able to get it through the swager meant it wasn't as rigid as it would be if it was folded to 90 degrees to begin with which then meant as I swaged the curved flange onto the edges it tended to introduce a bow into the whole channel section.

Also I only had a 4" long v block tool for the flypress so taking multiple bites at sharpening up the fold lines probably introduced more curve where it wasn't wanted.

 

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Step one was to machine up a decent length V former.

 

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fitted to the flypress with a matching lower former.

 

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I then dogged down the original section on a flat surface so i would be able to measure it as accurately as possible.

 

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Hopefully this shows the curvature which needs to be replicated.

 

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I made up two accurate templates of the curves to aid marking out the new sections.

 

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And I made another new lower roller for the swager that's just small enough to fit inside the channel section meaning it can be folded to 90 degrees before its put through the swager.

 

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I also thinned down the top roller slightly to allow a tighter fold angle.

 

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Took my time with this one and it came out pretty well.

 

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Curved where it should be!

 

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And straight where it should be!

 

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End profile - the distortion on the folds is only at the ends where the swager starts and stops, it gets trimmed off before fitting to the car.

 

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Folded up some small corner gussets.

 

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Replacement alongside the original.

 

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And test-fitted on the car.

 

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Forward end.

 

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Rear end.

 

It'll want a bit of fine tuning/adjustment but overall I'm pretty happy with the fit and it sort of proves the theory which is good as i think there will be quite a few sections which will need replacing!

 

Cheers for reading and commenting!

Dave

 

 

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  • 4 weeks later...

This post will be a bit out of sync with the rest of the thread but If I don't post it now it will be even more out of time whenever I end up posting it.

 

Back in October Austat tagged me in the eBay Tat thread - This brought my attention to a listing which due to not mentioning the word "Car" or "8000" anywhere in the listing had somehow evaded all of my Enfield related saved searches on eBay! 

The car in question was a couple of years later than my orange one, Appeared to have been off the road since 1990, Had a cracked windscreen, no interior, was missing its aluminium bonnet and had already been raped for its mini cooper spec steel wheels which the seller had listed and sold separately.

Naturally I had to throw a bid at it on the off chance it would turn out to have a mint chassis saving me much time and work on the rather crispy orange one.

 

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Listing image showing mismatched trailer wheels fitted and its recently removed original Mini Cooper spec rims in the background

 

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Collecting it from the bubble car museum in norfolk was an interesting experience...

 

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I've seen photos of this same badging on a couple of other enfields so assume it must be an ex electricity board car that was still in use into the 80s

 

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Seatbelt anchorage approval plate which the earlier cars don't have.

 

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The factory seems to have acquired a bead roller in the intervening two years between the orange car being built and this one - Literally every flat panel on this car has about 5 beads rolled into it!

 

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This car retains its solenoid based speed control system, albeit a later revised 1980s version that was retrofitted after the original systems had issues with contactor wear.

 

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Dashboard wiring is a lot more original than that on the orange car

 

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And being a later car, instead of the smiths electric fan heater for windscreen and footwell heating fitted to earlier builds this one has a 12v hairdryer mounted poking through a hole in the dashboard!

 

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Transformer and rectifier boards for onboard battery charger

 

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Timer control unit for battery charger

 

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Safely tucked away at the back of a friends industrial unit for the timebeing....

 

 

As a bonus here's a photo showing the stash of tax discs I found while working on the orange one covering 1987 until 2015:

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As usual cheers for reading and/or commenting

Dave

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  • coalnotdole changed the title to Enfield 8000 1970's Electric Car, Second Car Acquired
2 hours ago, coalnotdole said:

This post will be a bit out of sync with the rest of the thread but If I don't post it now it will be even more out of time whenever I end up posting it.

 

Back in October Austat tagged me in the eBay Tat thread - This brought my attention to a listing which due to not mentioning the word "Car" or "8000" anywhere in the listing had somehow evaded all of my Enfield related saved searches on eBay! 

The car in question was a couple of years later than my orange one, Appeared to have been off the road since 1990, Had a cracked windscreen, no interior, was missing its aluminium bonnet and had already been raped for its mini cooper spec steel wheels which the seller had listed and sold separately.

Naturally I had to throw a bid at it on the off chance it would turn out to have a mint chassis saving me much time and work on the rather crispy orange one.

 

57.thumb.jpg.4fac1c700abf28327acc07ec195fed43.jpg

Listing image showing mismatched trailer wheels fitted and its recently removed original Mini Cooper spec rims in the background

 

58.thumb.jpg.f9410ca53ae7e1309f792acfa13354a5.jpg

Collecting it from the bubble car museum in norfolk was an interesting experience...

 

59.thumb.jpg.053635f8c135f968412fa60286478f3a.jpg

60.thumb.jpg.94f25a07e79251754b280cfc5d900545.jpg

I've seen photos of this same badging on a couple of other enfields so assume it must be an ex electricity board car that was still in use into the 80s

 

61.thumb.jpg.2f9b57d845e7b811520f25c1c34fa145.jpg

Seatbelt anchorage approval plate which the earlier cars don't have.

 

62.thumb.jpg.bed59d7cf610968440eb14b8ae21df16.jpg

The factory seems to have acquired a bead roller in the intervening two years between the orange car being built and this one - Literally every flat panel on this car has about 5 beads rolled into it!

 

63.thumb.jpg.cb64acad4c48effe9d04750b3218c5dd.jpg  64.thumb.jpg.fe2c2526e6d91f800cefb4a59e215969.jpg

This car retains its solenoid based speed control system, albeit a later revised 1980s version that was retrofitted after the original systems had issues with contactor wear.

 

65.thumb.jpg.406ca323701780a59f79304f0aaa79a8.jpg

Dashboard wiring is a lot more original than that on the orange car

 

66.thumb.jpg.f85e34240bacbcfc73aadb6810a1b1a1.jpg

And being a later car, instead of the smiths electric fan heater for windscreen and footwell heating fitted to earlier builds this one has a 12v hairdryer mounted poking through a hole in the dashboard!

 

67.thumb.jpg.157c926e4a1264036db225c93ee46df5.jpg

Transformer and rectifier boards for onboard battery charger

 

68.thumb.jpg.33e534003e8f08061c19ca401ea7800d.jpg

Timer control unit for battery charger

 

69.thumb.jpg.275a6810ae62979876c71545da619aa7.jpg

Safely tucked away at the back of a friends industrial unit for the timebeing....

 

 

As a bonus here's a photo showing the stash of tax discs I found while working on the orange one covering 1987 until 2015:

56.thumb.jpg.7fe4296826dc39142214d234034f2aee.jpg

 

As usual cheers for reading and/or commenting

Dave

very Nicely done :) shame its been robbed of its wheels, they just look like regular 1970's Mini wheels to me, never realised they where cooper spec ones! do you recall what their part number was? 

 

very cool to see it still has the original speed controller setup, I hope someday to hear/see it in operation :) 

so whats the plan for it then? do you think both are salvageable? :) 

(pretty sure I have seen this one before somewhere as I remember its registration number being somewhat close to NPN924P! edit: ah yeah I see I gave the original ebay tat post a like when it was posted that explains the familiar feeling!)

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8 minutes ago, LightBulbFun said:

very Nicely done :) shame its been robbed of its wheels, they just look like regular 1970's Mini wheels to me, never realised they where cooper spec ones! do you recall what their part number was? 

 

very cool to see it still has the original speed controller setup, I hope someday to hear/see it in operation :) 

so whats the plan for it then? do you think both are salvable? :) 

The wheels are Dunlop LP918 according to the (incomplete) parts list I have.

I bought it in the hope that the chassis and body shell might be in better condition than the orange one but they're much of a muchness really - white one is slightly better underneath but not good enough that I would be happy without stripping it down. 

It's got both bumpers which I'm missing from the orange one so it might donate those. Obviously it also has a full set of original style control and charging gear but as its a later car it would require some modification to fit it to the earlier orange one (the charger transformers are larger and require a bigger compartment and stuff like that)

I've already doubled what I spent on buying the white car by purchasing a replacement bonnet, seats, and various interior/dash panels for it - Hopefully that should at least make it a more complete and ready candidate for restoration should I decide to sell it on.

Or the friend who is currently storing it (who also negotiated the purchase of the orange one on my behalf) is still interested in converting one to a modern electronic drivetrain so maybe it will donate its electrical gear and bumpers to my orange one then be rebuilt into a more modern version of an Enfield 8000...

For the moment the plan is to get the orange one structurally restored and rig it up running on the MOS90 controller it came with so I can make a decision on weather I want to revert it back to solenoid control or stick with the more modern arrangement.  That will probably influence what happens with the white one.

 

Cheers,

Dave

 

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On 3/31/2021 at 10:37 PM, R1152 said:

That Clairol hairdryer is just perfect!! 🤣

 

On 4/1/2021 at 9:54 AM, spartacus said:

I had to zoom in and check what I was looking at there.

@coalnotdoleIs that original, if so, I guess it's not a bad bit of 'out of the box thinking'.

 

Yes its original factory fitment! I think I was mistaken when I described it as 12v and its actually 240v AC and only runs while the cars plugged in charging so in theory you come out in the morning to a nice warm car. I'm not sure if Clairol designed the "Travel Turbo" with a 9 hour continuous duty cycle in mind though!

 

The earlier orange car has a smiths blower unit with a 600w 48v DC heating element - the manual describes it as an optional extra and makes a point of stating that running the heater whilst driving will dramatically reduce driving range! It suggests you leave the ignition switch in the "accessory" position with the heater turned on whilst charging off the mains supply.

Windscreen de-misting is achieved using a modern type laminated heated screen which I think was fairly cutting edge at the time - again the manual points out not to use it unnecessarily though!

IMG_3510.thumb.JPG.cca33e3b32ad102542a835f768f3279c.JPG

Thats the smiths blower/heater in the orange car. (computer fan at top right is unrelated and appears to have been part of a modification to battery compartment venting which Lucas must have been experimenting with during their ownership)

Cheers,

Dave

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      Within a month of purchase I managed to plant it in to a steel fence backwards after a botched gear change on a wet roundabout and ruined the N/S rear wing, although judging by the other dent that's packed with filler it looks like somebody had already done the same. I also managed to destroy a halfshaft and one of my Sprint alloys (good for an extra 15hp) in the incident, so now it's sitting on it's original steelies but painted black (good for an extra 5hp).
       
      It's only broken down on me twice. once with some sort of fuel delivery related problem which may or may not have been an empty fuel tank and once when the thermostat jammed shut and it overheated and blew out some O-rings for the cooling system. It has recently developed a taste for coolant and oil which is rather annoying, although it's done 89,300 miles which is about 80,000 more miles than BL engineering is designed to last, I'm keeping my eye on eBay for replacement engines... 
      I tried to keep ahead of the rust a bit by rubbing down the arches and re-painting them, but apparently rattle can paint isn't great when you are spraying it at -5C, it also highlighted how although my car might have been Inca Yellow in 1976 it's now more of a "cat piss" sort of shade. So I ended up with the wrong shade of yellow which has rust coming back through after 5 weeks. Did I mention I'm incompetent?
       
      The other car is the first "classic" car I bought, so I can't bear to sell it. It's a '77 Dolomite 1300 and it cost £1400 (about £400 too much) and has been nothing but a pain in the arse:
       

       
      It looks much prettier (from 100 yards) but that's most due to the darker paintwork hiding the rust. It lives a mollycoddled life in my garage, where it somehow still manages to rust, and is utterly rubbish. 0-60 is measured on a calendar, top speed is 80ish but at that point it uses more oil than petrol, it rarely ventures over 50mph and if you encounter an incline of any sort you can kiss that sort of speed goodbye, along with about £20 of 20W50 as it vanishes out of the exhaust in the form of blue smoke.
       
      One of the PO's had clearly never heard of the term "oil change" so it developed into brown sludge that coated everything internally with the next owner(s) blissfully pouring fresh oil on top of it. This lasted until about 600 miles into my ownership when there was muffled "pop" from the engine bay and the car became a 3-cylinder. The cause was catastrophic wear to the top end causing a rocker arm to snap:
       

       
      As this was my first classic car I'd assumed it was supposed to sound like the engine was full of marbles, it wasn't.
       
      I put the engine back together with second hand bits declared it utterly fucked and promptly did another 5000 miles with it. After about 3500 of those miles the oil burning started, valve seals have gone so it's been relegated to my parent's garage as a backup car and something to take to local car shows as the 1850 is now embarrassingly ugly. I'm keeping my eye on eBay for replacement engines (deja vu, anybody?) Oh, I also recently reversed it into a parked Ford Fiesta and royally fucked up the rear bumper, rear panel and bootlid. Did I mention I'm incompetent?
       
      There have been two other cars in my life. My first car, a 2008 Toyota Yaris 1.0 an it's replacement a 2012 Corsa 1.4T. I didn't really want either of them, but it's a long story involving my parents and poor life choices. Ask if you want to hear it!
       
      So that's a brief summary of my current shite. If you want more pictures or details of anything do say as I've got photos of almost everything I'd done with the cars.
    • By mat_the_cat
      Thought I should probably start a thread, given that a few people have suggested it. For my sins, my first car was a 1985 Hyundai Stellar. Bought back in 1997, when the sun still shone, I had more hair, and the world was generally a better place.
       
      This may be the earliest photo I have, I think from 1998:
       

       
      Anyway, I drove everywhere in it, and clocked up over 100k miles before I was given an Alfa Romeo 75. So I took the Stellar off the road for some much needed TLC. Made some progress on it - Rebuilt all the suspension, fitted a rebuilt Cortina* rear axle, Princess 4 pot front calipers and Capri vented discs etc - before a couple of house moves and renovations put it on the back burner.
       
      * before anyone says they are identical underneath, there are some differences. I fitted a replacement axle fairly early on in my ownership, only to fit that not only was the propshaft flange the wrong size, the UJ was totally different so I couldn't even fit a new yoke. Finding a company on the day before New Year's Eve who could cut off the end, weld a new UJ on and balance it wasn't too easy, especially one that was accessible by push bike!
       
      Anyway, late last year I found some renewed motivation, and have been working on it when time and money permit. Here is what it looked like in October:
       
       
      OMG barn find?

       
      Front suspension OK at first glance...
       

       
      ...but it has turned out the calipers had seized (so are away being rebuilt) and all the (brand new) ball joint boots had perished:

       
       
      Quite a bit of welding is needed too, but I had a setback just before Christmas when we were burgled and my welder stolen
       

       
      Crusty roof rail

       
      I've cleared some of the crap away from it now (it's not stored at mine - I'd love to own somewhere that big!) so might be able to get more photos. Currently working on the rear brakes, and disappointed to find that the shotblasted rear axle is now starting to rust after two coats of POR15 and 7 years storage under cover...
       

    • By mat_the_cat
      This.
       

       
      By popular* demand* here is a thread about the least popular VW van around.
       
      The photo is as bought, back in 2006. Purchased with a year's MOT, 6 months tax, and a caravan all for £600. To his credit, the seller had received many enquiries from people wanting to buy either the caravan or van, but not both although refused to end the auction early when there were bids already on it. So it failed to go anywhere near what I thought it would sell for.
       
      The combination suited us well, as we could live in the caravan wile we carried out major house work, and use the van for carrying building materials. This we did, enduring a sometimes cosy but often cold winter in the caravan while I used the LT as my only road legal vehicle. It was already carpeted inside, with a simple electrical system as it had been previously used as a motorbike race van. It saw a little bit of use as a 'tent on wheels', seen here in Scotland in 2007:
       

       
      I'd always wanted to build a campervan, although I kept this quiet when seeking domestic funding for buying it in the first place! So when the bulk of the work was done, I suggested using some fittings from the caravan to convert it. This was met with approval (to my surprise), and we planned to take it to a festival one August.
       
      I waited for a forecast of dry weather, but none came and I was running out of time so ended up booking time off work a week before the festival. The reason for dry weather is that I wanted to tackle some welding...
       

       
      As it turned out, I had one dry day to work on it! After much searching I'd bought some genuine VW panels (despite forum experts saying there were none remaining), which fitted very nicely
       

       

       

       
      Managed to get that far on Monday, then it was time to tackle the floorpan but I'll leave that tale for another day...
       

       

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