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1971 MGB GT - Shopping at Beaulieu - see page 34


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Posted

That brake hose. I can hear it's screams from here. 😵‍💫😒

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Posted

Iirc (long time ago now) I undid the spring pan, put the spring back in, used a jack to bring the pan up to alignment and put the bolts back through the pan. I might have even only undone one pair of bolts on the spring pan but I can't remember now. Also stay well out of the way on the potential firing line of the spring when it was starting to be under tension.

  • Like 2
Posted
2 minutes ago, SiC said:

Iirc (long time ago now) I undid the spring pan, put the spring back in, used a jack to bring the pan up to alignment and put the bolts back through the pan. I might have even only undone one pair of bolts on the spring pan but I can't remember now. Also stay well out of the way on the potential firing line of the spring when it was starting to be under tension.

Changing coil springs is still one job I really do hate and shy away from! It’s the thought of what can happen when they break loose that does it. I saw it happen one back when I worked in a garage and although nobody got hit, it still rattles me now.

Ive got the rear springs and shocks to do on the Volvo but I just can’t make myself go and do it😆

Posted
8 hours ago, SiC said:

That brake hose. I can hear it's screams from here. 😵‍💫😒

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Yep, that was my bad. I kept the hub upright the entire time but when I went to take the photo, the hub moved and pulled on the brake hose.

Posted

I had a go at aligning the upper and lower steering column shafts yesterday.

The alignment must be right for the UJ that connects the two shafts together to be happy. Just by looking at it, there is no way of knowing which shaft is incorrectly positioned. 

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Removing the UJ is easy, takes two minutes.

By fitting these cones over the ends of the two shafts, I could see that the two shafts were misaligned both horizontally and vertically. 

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The idea is that four fixings that secure the upper column shaft to the bulkhead are loosened, the upper column shaft is aligned with the lower column shaft, the fixings are tightened up and the job is done. Unfortunately, the upper column shaft had no more available vertical adjustment left.

Therefore, I had to loosen / remove the four bolts that secure the steering rack to the crossmember, place washers that act as spacers, which alters the alignment of the steering rack, thus the alignment of the upper end of the lower column shaft. Are you still with me?

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With the lower column shaft now at a happier angle, I managed to adjust the upper column shaft into the correct position.

Bingo.

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A very brief drive up and down my road before the heavens opened revealed that all seems well, the steering is no longer binding. 

I have a theory as to what may have been causing the knocking that I could feel through the steering wheel.

The upper steering column shaft passes through an opening in the bulkhead. The gap between the shaft and the bulkhead is only a few millimetres wide. The rubber grommet that I have now reinstated, see photo below, should fill the gap. It didn't before yesterday. 

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I wonder whether it was possible that the worn crossmember pads were allowing the crossmember and thus the steering rack that is bolted to it, to move up and down as I drove over bumps, which caused the upper and lower steering columns to move up and down too, which caused the bottom section of the steering column to impact on the bulkhead and that impact was transferred up to the steering wheel. 

Looking at the state of the crossmember pads, whilst they were a bit squashed, I don't think they were that worn to allow the crossmember to move so much that it was knocking on the underside of the chassis. 

Fingers crossed that the problem is now sorted.

More soon. 

 

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I went to Beaulieu last Saturday. The weather was great, I spent almost six hours traipsing up and down the aisles, clocked up over 16k steps on my app. Not bad for a man of my vintage. 

This MGB GT was up for sale at Beaulieu back in May, asking price was £2k. It was on offer again, this time the vendor was after sensible offers. It is rotten, completely, either needs months of welding or a re-shell. I would give him twenty quid for it, if he delivered it to my house. 

Just proves what a bargain my MGB was, when I bought it at Beaulieu last year. This Sunday will be exactly a year since that day.

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I've always struggled to get comfortable behind the wheel of the MGB, partially due to the absence of an arm rest for my right elbow. I was after a matching pair of black plastic handles / armrests and found exactly what I wanted for a fiver. Fitting didn't take long, I have secured the handles with small nuts, bolts and washers, to the backs of the door cards. Not pretty but I can now get more comfortable.

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I'm still working out how to fill the gap between the underside of the dashboard and the top of the centrally mounted speaker. My latest plan is to fabricate a bracket for some additional switches, out of metal, which I will cover with black vinyl. I have all the necessary materials, hopefully enough skill to do the job but, at the moment, not enough time to make a start.

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More soon. 

  • Peter C changed the title to 1971 MGB GT - Shopping at Beaulieu - see page 34
Posted

The door handle mod is pretty subtle, seems like a good idea to me.

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