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Tales of a new business, trials and endless uphill battles


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Posted

A proper workshop, and not a parts fitter - there are far too few of these. Good luck.

Posted

Awesomeness right  there.  Good luck.

  • Agree 1
Posted

Excellent! I wish you success and good times ^^

Posted

Handy to know, out chesterfield way I guess? I use a place down on the Station Road at New Whit from time to time. 

Posted

Good for you and well done, wish you all the best with the venture. Your work looks good

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Posted

Well done on having the balls to give it a go, I really hope it works out for you. Where have you based yourself? 

Posted

Nice one, good luck with it. I’ve been SE since 2001 best thing ever, not easy by any means & can get scary, especially at the start, but well worth it. Whereabouts are you?

Posted

Some proper old school mechanicing/machining is a rare thing to find - hopefully word quickly spreads. Best of luck to you.

Posted

Hope it all goes well. As others have said, tell us where you are and (unless it’s against the AS rules) post a link to your website. 

Posted

Thankyou all for your kind words there's no doubt its going to be a stress fest but I'm relishing the challenge my sister has been the star really as I've basically thrown her right into the deep end with welding/fabricating and quite intense mechanical work without any sign of flagging so far, not bad for a former office based employee!

We're based at Derwent foundry, Whatstandwell DE4 5HG 

01629 818296

RRM Ltd facebook

RRM Ltd website

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Posted

Nice little website you've set up. Gives a good overview. I don't do facething so good to see you having an online presence.

Hope the new business goes well for you and sister.

Posted

More powarh to you and your sis - sounds like an excellent setup with a great attitude. I'm sure word will spread, over time.

Posted

Looks excellent and just make sure the kettle is properly installed too!


Gzongenflatch

Posted

As I occupy this area of work but have never had the balls to do what you have done, I wish you all the success that you deserve. Top man.

Posted

Thankyou all, very kind uplifting words

So today's work has been in 2 stages 

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This crafter is in for a mystery engine problem, it was bought by the owner stripped like it is with the engine unable to start, when attempted it basically just made like a knock sound every crank rotation and would just fire, so checking it manually I found all 4 cylinders felt like they had compression 1 maybe less than the others and the timing marks all made sense, so I kept persevering to which it did fire up and run on 3 seemingly

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Next up today this bad lad, 2.0 petrol freight rover in the exact spec i wanted for a recovery truck, decent underneath too !

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The convoy doors offend me greatly it had to be saidbso I'll have to swap those for some earlier jobs 

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Chassis is all sweet so that's getting painted up ASAP and the cab will go BL blue I think 

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Here's a wierd thing, the pistons stop short by 8mm which to me seems mad, its a 2.0 O series so has the 89mm stroke rather than the 75mm of the 1.7, the engine itself seems to have been bored out 20 over and maybe overheated a few times as the radiator is new as is a few ignition bits, it running terribly prompted me to take off the head as the carb settings and ignition timing seemed to make no difference to running at all !,,I might end up building a new 2.0 out of a 1.7 and reusing the oversize pistons !

Posted

Having a look at the freight rover again, I decided to whip out the +0.5mm pistons to reuse in a seasoned 1.7 engine block as I feel the bores in this engine have suffered through an over heat, so I instructed the chief apprentice sister to whip the sump off and bop out the pistons so I could strip the 1.7 to a bare block and get the parts off to the rebore shop expeditiously 

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Easy work for wor kidda who is a bloody fast learner at this sort of work 

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i compared the crank to a B series but alas the bastard is different, I could have coverted a spare 1.7 to 2.0 without much effort if so !

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this VW 2.0tdi which runs of three but feels like every cylinder has compression actually snapped off 2 of the exhaust rocker arms so it might be that with a set of new ones fitted that it might be OK however I dislike the idea of valves that have been forced up by the piston so will recommend a head rebuild at the very least.

Posted
On 11/04/2024 at 13:40, Jikovron said:

 

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Cambelt snappage job on an iveco 2.3, lots of new valves and lapping required

On behalf of @Cavcraft I'd like to thank you for keeping another one of these on the road🫡

 

Posted

Looks like you're loving this, too, which I'm sure makes the job so much easier. 

Best of luck on your venture. 

Posted

Just replacing the rocker arms on a diesel is pretty common, the valves tend to go straight up and down so don't get bent when contact happens.

Might be a slight love bite on the piston but nothing really to affect running.

I would definitely stick just the rocker arms on first and run it up and see what it sounds like.

  • Like 1
Posted

On my old mk5 transit the belt went and bent the pushrods and I reckon a lot are sacrificially designed for the rockers to pop as much easier to do.

The old tranny just had a new belt the rods straightened in the vice.

Good luck in the new venture and if you are considering selling the sister on let me know.


Gzongenflatch

Posted

Today's job was to fit a roof rack to a camper which had hit a bridge and crushed the rack and bent all the brackets, after welding new rails onto it and straightening out the brackets we got the rough smoker forklift out and immediately had to mess about with 'fork extensions' 20240420_154111.jpg.7c1f2035c49ae6631b44f93901f0330f.jpg20240420_151235.jpg.f6315043e93f9063fc6b35d65e89d75c.jpg

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Tightened on and missing fasteners repatriated, and also we fitted our own design of fabricated pannier box carrier frames to the door along with relocating a ladder to the side and number plate and lights to the top of the door !

Posted

How much weight do you think the back doors will be able to take in those boxes? (genuine question)

Great thread!

  • Like 2
Posted

Looks like you're going great guns at this. Liking to work so far, I'm also hoping the change of freight rover doors means you might pick up the old sliding ones from the Daf versions😆

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Posted

You look like you might have the right setup to have a look a job for me actually.

I've got this thing sat on my drive slowly getting fettled. Stud pattern on these is 4 x 110, really odd size. I've got a quite rare set of refurbished Lotus Eclat (not elite) 14" alloys that i reckon would look the business on it, but they're 114mm pcd. I can well imagine that fitting them might involve redrilling hubs or whatever, if its even possible at all. Might you be up for taking a look? I guess I'd have to send the car & wheels over to you on a truck (no big deal as I'm only about 9 miles from your workshop) and you could see what you think about it.

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Posted
On 21/04/2024 at 09:47, jon.k said:

How much weight do you think the back doors will be able to take in those boxes? (genuine question)

Great thread!

I stood on the frames a few times to get on the roof and it flexed the door skin a smidge but wasn't enough to be concerning, he's on about using it for sleeping bags only 

Posted
On 21/04/2024 at 11:42, robt100 said:

Looks like you're going great guns at this. Liking to work so far, I'm also hoping the change of freight rover doors means you might pick up the old sliding ones from the Daf versions😆

Would need a panel van for those I think! 😆 

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