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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/09/22 in all areas

  1. Hopefully OK to share in here/it's pretty relevant Recently I purchased an HKS turbo kit listed for kp61 starlet for my small online based parts business. It utilizes the original carb in a direct blow through setup. Seriously considered going back to 5k to use it in the van but luckily someone purchased it before too much thought. Happy to say it will be staying in nz and they have decided to let me restore it for them also. Jordan at Autoparts Vapour Blast has done a great job vapour blasting the flaking wrinkle coat off so I can re-apply for the new owner
    13 points
  2. Then put it inside along with its much larger American friends - looks even smaller now, I will be back onto it next weekend now I have help in the form of an expert panel guy. aka my cousin - the owner of the Americans!
    10 points
  3. This is dragging on a bit, but the end is in sight. The other weekend I had a friend help me reinstall the gearbox. It went fairly smoothly, just with the usual limitations on space making it a bit of a pain to wriggle into place. A bit of wiggling and jiggling got it to slot into place. It appears the clutch centering tool did its job again. With the gearbox back in its home, there were a few other jobs to attend to. One of them was to check the heater hoses. OEM replacements are NLA and have been for years. There is a group buy with the Rover Coupe Club to replace them with a moulded silicone set, but it's cost-prohibitive for me since I'm trying to slow the spending snowball down. Thus, the plan was to use some T pieces and generic hoses to make a replacement. I got most of the way there before deciding it was too ugly and scrapping the lot. The moulded OEM hose above my monstrosity. If I just had one more 90 degree it would've been better, but I didn't. I thoroughly inspected the original hose and found a couple of areas of concern. One end the hose had burst, and the previous owner had just slipped the hose on a bit further. There was also a small cut in the hose further up. The rest of the hoses although old were in good enough condition I'm happy to reuse them for now. I did cut that section out and joined a fresh piece of hose to it. It'll be cut to length once the heater pipe it goes into is reinstalled. The hose was then refitted. I wish it was just a normal pair of hoses without the moulded ends and joining section, but it wouldn't be Rover if it was. The speedo cable was next to install. This was a pain. There is a clip that holds the cable into the speedo drive, but the rubber boot needs to go over the clip without pushing it out of place. I had a lot of trouble with this until I removed the speedo drive and installed the cable and boot out of the gearbox. Then it was a case of installing the drive into the gearbox again, making sure to locate the retaining slot correctly. I found it easiest to do this from under the car (mainly due to the height that I have the car lifted to). Next I reinstalled the rear mount bracket, clutch cable and starter. I sourced a new lower bolt for the starter since it was completely missing. It turns out the crank position sensor cable has a bracket that is meant to be attached to the starter bolt that was missing, so that's now secured properly. With the gearbox mostly installed it was now time to reinstall the upgraded shifter linkages. I had installed a kit to rebush the U-Joint and poly bushes on the steady bar. I found it easiest to install the round front bush on the steady bar (loosely so you can lift the bar up), and then the UJ before installing the bushing at the rear. It's a bit clumsy otherwise. I had to change the orientation of one of the bolts through the UJ as the longer threaded section was catching on the gearbox casing. It's very tight though. With the front installed, there are two bolts to install in the rear of the linkages. Remember to fit the plate to the bush too. Tighten the round bush on the front and that job is done. I couldn't help but jump into the car and see how it felt. It's very direct with little to no free play. I'm looking forward to smashing through gears with it. Before the gearbox could be filled with oil I needed to install the drive shafts. The short passengers one was all good, just a quick clean up and a new retaining clip was all that it needed. It popped nicely into place The drivers side though, needed some work. The main thing was that the splines on the very end had been damaged, but there were other warnings signs, such as the boot having a single zip tie on it, while the big end was being retained with hopes and dreams. Not that it mattered, it's not like it had any grease in the joint (and no signs of it having ejected the grease) The retaining collar was all beat to shite too. I'm glad I didn't choose to run this joint. I split the outer joint off, leaving just the tripod. No, I haven't cleaned it, this is how little grease was in it. The tripod is retained with a circlip Once the circlip is removed, the tripod can be removed from the shaft with a puller. The new tripod was then hammered into place, and the circlip refitted. The boot was cleaned up, grease pumped into the joint, and new bands were used to secure the boot in place. The old retaining clip was removed And a new one popped into place The shaft was then slid into place and the inner joint clipped into the diff. Now it was time to fill the gearbox with oil. I chose to use Penrite Trans Gear 75W80 this time as it's cheaper than the Honda MTF I used last time but meets Land Rover MTF94 spec. It was pretty easy to fill. I just popped the pump from my filler bottle right into the oil bottle and pumped about 2.3L of fluid in until it started to run out. Now it's playing the white paper game, where hopefully I will come out tomorrow and see no oil on the paper. Before wrapping up for the day I gave the heater pipe and battery tray a good going over with the wire brush and then rust killed them. I'm prepping the pipes as I still haven't secured a replacement yet, and I can't have this car off the road taking up garage space much longer, so I will refit the original pipe for now and swap it out later when I have a replacement. Hopefully it won't fail in the meantime. The battery tray is pretty bad, with a couple of decent holes in it, but the main part is solid and it still bolts down OK. Both got a good coating of black zinc paint, in the hopes it will protect them. They're drying now, but will be refitted soon. Then it's just a case of waiting for the replacement lower coolant hose to arrive from Greece, and I should be able to have the car rolling again.
    9 points
  4. Made a shitty planter out of an old cylinder, brazed up the holes and put some pipe round the top for safety left a hole in the bottom for the rain.
    8 points
  5. Mostly posting as it'll likely be the only time it'll be this clean/organized haha Grabbed another trolley from Bunnings as well as a meter of 32mm pvc tube, cut it in half and got carried away cleaning up the ends ha SS filler on the side, alloy at the rear.
    7 points
  6. Bolting more stuff on, Suspension all back together, didnt need a spring compressor, just jacked up the lower arm till the top kingpin nut poked through, so thats good news for easy future altitude adjustment. Fiat parts bin allows new top quality russian poly bushes for the front swaybar, for picking up a few extra 10ths around Bathurst. Also got the steering box and gear shift in as well, got a helper for a couple of weeks Front half of the gear linkage in, the rod takes a totally bonkers path though the middle of the master cylinder box to a shaft to the other (ie LHD) side where the rear rod takes over. Fiat first gen Panda linkage bushes and clips are a perfect replacement and will also suit the 2300, and also very cheap so i bought enough for both vehicles Compared to the madness going on under the floor, the interior is pretty clean. Pedals back on and first time they are not at floor level. Ill clean up the accelerator pedal and mount it to the floor repair panel so it can be driven easily in the meantime. Dash and column back together, and with a seat, thats pretty much the entire interior, lol
    6 points
  7. However finally back onto it today, sandblast for a start.
    6 points
  8. Such a excellent blend/colour match you'd never even guess it had been painted Boots on and lined up. A tweak of the latch and its actually shutting nicely on the first attempt now
    5 points
  9. Cables tucked away in some sheathing with cloth tape securing the ends. All getting clipped in to the factory mounting points
    5 points
  10. it was this: Ah, ok, some bogan had put the bolts in the wrong place, and the long one eventually wore through the water jacket. I had a think, and realised the cooling is only 15psi at ~100deg C, so, JB Weld! Tickle up the top of the piston Button up the top of the engine Then decorate the front of the Prius...
    5 points
  11. Just ordered some 850cc injectors so I've got plenty of headroom incase e85 becomes available at pump again and I decide to go forged rods and pistons down the track and try make 500hp at the wheels its got plenty of juice available. Started looking where to jam turbo, definitely passengers side wont know where it will physically fit till turbo arrives plenty of room for a 3.5" dump pipe. Obviously getting drivers side exhaust over to other side of engine bay is going to need doing will go across front of engine no issues lots of open space there. Something like the below will probably work best enough room for MAF and air filter and straight shot out then down for exhaust.
    4 points
  12. This evening I got the call. "Come and collect your Escort " So I jumped into the Transit and headed down to the paint shop. Had to get a couple of shots of it in the sunlight. Excuse the poor pics and shadows.
    3 points
  13. Late last night the doors, bonnet and boot were getting the first couple of base coats applied. Hopefully collect the car this afternoon.
    3 points
  14. First time working on a car "maintained" in NZ??
    3 points
  15. Of course, the next day, on the way to the xmas BBQ, my rash fit of piston cleaning caught up with me so I was down to one cylinder again, but that only took a couple of minutes to sort out. Good. So now I can go sort out that shitty carpet...
    3 points
  16. Hi All, Long time listener first time caller. Finally around to posting this up as I've now made a start with it. "It" being my 1982 KP62 Starlet. Shes a 4 door example, in beautiful tan/poo/brown/orange colour (no pics from her previous life for now sorry). I've owned for about 8 years, and had it as my daily for 3 of those, but in 2016 took it off the road due to a very tired motor and an exhaust that was in two large pieces. Being young and dumb I thought why not pull the motor and hook into a rebuild? Well taking the motor out was no problems, but then life stepped in (figures). Being in my parents garage a 3.5 hour drive away didn't help etc etc, and so there it remained, a sad looking shell taking up precious space in my old mans cave. 5 years and a move back down to the dirty Duds later, here we are. Towards the end of last year I went bugger it I'll have a go at getting this thing on the road. Now at this point I must disclose I have minimal mechanical knowledge and experience (can do a service on my car etc.) but the plan has always been to learn as I go and call on help from mates/others in the classic kiwi way. The dream has always been 4AGE. Redtop, smallport, maybe supercharge. That dream is still a dream for now due to a few reasons (money, time, all the good ones). So the plan was to rebuild the old 3K, get a new exhaust built and just enjoy it for a few summers. But plans often change... So what's actually happened you my ask? Well just before I was about to make a start, I stumbled across a rebuilt 3K head and block for basically the cost of the rebuild. Figured would be silly not to grab it and save myself some money and time... But there's another problem, I'm a bit of a perfectionist and a bit "all or nothing"... So once I had this rebuilt base and began pulling tired, crusty old parts off the original motor to swap over I thought, why not try and replace/restore/rejuvenate these? Or even better thoughts like "Why not upgrade?" or "You've come this far" or "you're not going to do it later are you?". And that's where the wallet opened up and the previous comment about saving money and time needed to be redacted. So where are we at today - well I have managed to get most of the bits I wanted for the rebuilt motor. Just waiting on the camshaft (regrind) and valve springs to come back. Also have to order an upgraded alternator from the guys at Olds Cool up north (among some other bits I'm praying they have, we'll get to those). And then we can finally start assembling the motor. We've hit a few roadblocks, which I'll throw up once I get a discussion thread up. But lets leave it at that for now, will follow up with some pics soon. Looking forward to the times ahead, I hope you lot are as well.. or at least at having a chuckle as I battle along! Rob.
    2 points
  17. Its been 3.5 years or so, blame Covid lockdowns and Lazyiness. In April 2020, loaded it up - so easy with a car this small - and hauled it off to another workshop with the intention of finally making some progress.
    2 points
  18. Sizing up the switches for these they will fit nicely into two blank plate slots in the dash
    2 points
  19. You cunts better stay at the woody in Renwick.
    2 points
  20. An yesterday i picked it up from the booth and took it back to the panel/painters place so he can fit up panels and get stuck into it.
    2 points
  21. Ok, these next pics are what all of us are aiming for. A freshly painted shell / car that we can finish and detail and finally enjoy. Hopefully you guys enjoy these as much as I have.
    2 points
  22. Yay 2022. Putting stuff back on. First up, hydraulic lines. Usually the first thing installed at the factory for the same reason im doing them first, its much easier with everything out the way. Also the reason for painting the driver side wheel well and master cylinder mount even tho there is still a big hole in the floor and rust in all the doors. I had picked up plated cunifer line, 6m of 1/4" (for feed from the reservoirs and the clutch line) and 26m of 3/16" for all the brake lines. This is the brake and clutch master cylinder, where 6 lines, 4x 1/4" (3 inlets and one clutch outlet) and 2x 3/16" (Front and rear brake circuit outlets, which both split off L & R elsewhere): Woops, wrong photo! Here it is: Basic process was use the original lines as a template to start with (leaving them a bit long both ends) fit up on the van a million times and finally cut to length and flare. Then cut off the flare, put the line nut on, and flare again... This is the front brakes, single line from the master then splitting at the T to the right (short) and left (long) Feed lines from the reservoirs: Getting closer... Now has - New Clutch Master - resleeved Brake Master, - all new plated cunifer lines - refurbished OEM line nuts (I got new nuts but they are a bit different and didnt clamp the lines in the fittings, so i couldnt use them) Still need to clamp these all down but pretty happy: Other New brake related bits from the fiat parts bin, -pressure switch for the brake lights (if the OEM one does not work) and - clips for the reservoirs: Reservoirs all fitted up too. Will put a bubble flare on the feed lines to make a better seal i think. This all ended up taking waaaaaay longer than i thought, and im not quite done yet, but at least its all laid in and plumbed up and i can start putting the suspension back in.
    2 points
  23. Vajazzled the gubby underparts. Engine Bay: Stage 1: Get sick of catching sandpaper and fingers in brackets and tabs. Wax and grease remover spayed everywhere (i wish i liked paint prep better, cause stuff would turn out better, but, well, i just don't) Stage 2: Get primer mostly where its supposed to go. Lying on my back painting up mostly. Stage 3: Top Coat. Very happy with the colour Radiator Tunnel/body smuggling area: Similar scenario as above, but i did my *first welding* on this thing and let in a piece that i cut out with the floor, as it carries a couple of brackets. Had a few more rounds of hole filling and grinding after this shot. And a bit of a waft over the cargo barrier/battery area - the three brackets are carry the clutch and brake fluid reservoirs which made the whole area pretty rusty And the in the wheel wells, concentrating on the suspension mounts and brake/clutch pedal and master cylinder mount area. This photo from before i got into the master cylinder mount area, shows what nice clean metal was hiding under the grubby rust on the frame rails. Painted. Stoked to get to this stage by the end of the 2021. 2022 will be all about putting things back on.
    2 points
  24. Used these wiring diagrams I found online for fuel pump control with carters oil pressure safety switch and for the thermoswitched fan with a manual override. Have also put a manual override allocation on the fuel pump incase there are any issues. Used a couple of powertech 30A pre-made relay circuits with switches and swapped pins around to suit my needs
    1 point
  25. Must of got his hands on some Triumph 2500 Lucas radiator grot, ive had worse just wast expecting it this far into the 2020's.
    1 point
  26. As a disclaimer to this oncoming story, and this entire thread - Despite my overwhelming enthusiasm for the absolutely mundane. Yes. Yes I am indeed aware that in objective terms this is not a very fast car by any metric. My work wagon is probably quicker. That's fine. It's not breaking any world records. That's fine. It looks like a melted M&M. Thats fine. And so on. The hilarity and joy from this car though comes from the disparity between expectations and execution. High expectations are very rarely met. Low expectations are easy to exceed. Being an incredibly common, dreary, budget car that's commonly auto and mostly 1300cc or 1000cc. Almost everyone in NZ has had enough exposure to a Vitz/Echo/Yaris/equivilent shitbox to form a fairly robust opinion of how much they suck. I myself drove this car completely standard for about 8 years. So I know. I really do. So to exceed this expectation even by a little, is really good fun. I mean, when I went to the Toyota Festival the guy at the gate was reluctant to let me in when I said I was going to drive it on the track. Haha! Classic. So anyway. My partner has been fostering a kitten, and a local young "car guy" expressed some interest in rehoming it. (Someone I'd previously taken for a drive in the Echo in its current state) After some negotiation I agreed to drive over to his house to drop it off. I drive to park around the back of his house, and there's lots of cars there and a bunch of teenagers looking at me as I pull in. I get out of a Toyota Echo, with a kitten in a crate, wearing some raggedy shit because I'd just been doing some yard work around the house. So not a first impression that screams "Car person" so much as "low tide mark on the poverty line". The guy I knew says to one of the other onlookers: "He brought the Echo! Ohhhh you should race Dave hahahaha" His friend looks the car up and down, and says "Ummm no" with a look of thinly veiled insult. Insulted at the prospect that his car was in any way comparable to something as lame as that. Then he says to me "Dave, he's got a beams Celica" Me: "Nice! Cool." So we go have a quick look at it. Then he says back to his friend: "No really, you should race Dave haha" Then his friend started looking a bit more suspicious, but not quite sure of the situation. I explained that I didnt want to race anyone- just here to drop off a kitten. I think from his perspective, we appeared equally embarrassed and confused by the situation. As in, geez it would be embarassing for me, some weirdo cat man who'd probably not driven fast before to try race a celica and get smoked. Then also why would he waste his time racing an echo? I reiterated that I didnt want to race anyone, but if he wanted to come for a drive, he's welcome. He still didnt seem that keen, but his mates egged him on saying he should. Surprisingly, after being told it had a prius motor in it, with a massive 1500cc big block. He hadnt gained any further enthusiasm. The bonnet stayed shut. So he gets in, and we go down the road a bit like he's about to get Barryed to within an inch of his life. (This part was probably accurate) I keep the revs super low, and drive like uhhh... how you drive an Echo. It just sounds like a standard car while you're driving along normally. I make some chit chat about general car stuff. He starts telling me about projects he wants to do and so on while we amble a bit further out of town. We get to a backroad and I check the mirrors and stop. Foot flat, revs go up, and launch control activates. Dump the clutch. First gear was gratuitously wheel spinny, for a laugh rather than getting anywhere too quickly. Squeals a bit into 2nd. Then we run through a few gears and a few upcoming corners at full noise. "What the fuck! What the actual fuck!" "What the fuck!" "I'm not racing this thing!" "How the... what... jesus" Anyone whos met me in person can vouch for my absolutely punchable smug looking face, at this point I was easily smug level 100/100. Then I go drop him back off and all his mates are having a giggle while he just looks a bit bewildered hahaha. "What the hell. A prius motor. What the hell." And we all have a laugh about it. The end. Also, video as requested
    1 point
  27. For an RS TOY it's a good size to start with, ease you into the lifestyle.
    1 point
  28. Milly went to her new happy forever* home today. Her proud new owner is none other than @Willdat? Will had managed to keep this k11 purchase a secret from his lovely wife (who also happens to be a Hannah.. ) and the look of excitement on her face when she first laid eyes on the new family car was amazing. She was literally speechless Hopefully Milly will be getting her own build thread as Will has a few ideas floating about for her I took a photo of our tiny K11 convoy as we headed over towards the dark clouds of Richmond to deliver Milly. Will was super stoked that we are including, free of charge, the beautiful custom made windscreen sunshade with Milly. We spotted a total of 3 other K11s driving in Nelson but were sadly not quick enough to snap shots for the busiest thread on oldschool In other news.. we drove Minky to Blenheim for Xmas. With the anti sway bars added she handles even sweeter. Such good fun. Really only let down by the terrible tyres but they will get changed when we suss out what wheels to fit. For now I'll just have giggles making huge amounts of squealy sounds at not very fast speeds. When we got back near home we re-filled and Minky had done something in the vicinity of between 4.7 to 5l/100km - was tricky to tell exactly because awkward to get the last bit of fuel in. Super stoked with that given we had some proper good fun on all the hills there and back. The G# 'sports' seats that are now fitted in Minky, although supportive, are no where near as comfy as the Recaros in my Imp so we are going to keep a look out for some to fit. But not expecting much luck given how much folk ask for them nowadays. After following @Roman Yaris thread and watching a fair few Micra turbo vids on the tube I am certainly going to have some fun in the future building another engine or turboing this one. But that will wait because some might say this little gap filling shopping car purchase has already snowballed a touch... Such is the way on Oldschool
    1 point
  29. After a long stint, over a year, of not being motivated she is back, went for red oxide primer, may get a top coat may get a patina look, will leave her as is for now and see what grows on me? Decided the tray was too high so chopped the top rung off also lowered the door to the same height, end result much lower look. Have plans for some form of cover for the tray and cockpit area, more soon….. Hopefully?…………
    1 point
  30. A good few days progress, hard work in a black shed with 29 degree days. Tunnel is all closed up again, biggest welding job I’ve done so plenty to learn. Finished off the two driveshaft hoops as well, front one was straight forward but the rear one needed a little more thought/work. Fitted crush tubes for the new gearbox mount. Have done more cleaning on the engine and painted the block too. Back to work tomorrow so progress will slow down again.
    1 point
  31. Lots of dumb little shit done but not much photo worthy. I was doing more with the dash and washing the vents and discovered these wee knobs we polishable pot metal so I’ve given them a wee spruce up to brighten up..something. This morning I whipped the paint and surface rust off the roof and will get it into epoxy tomorrow.
    1 point
  32. It's not often your partner comes back from supermarket ( and past the painters ) and says " i have just seen 2 people working on your car .. ) " . This was at 8pm on Boxing day ! Awesome progress and big ups to Carl @ Calibre Collision.
    1 point
  33. Managed to get a few more bits trial fitted this afternoon.
    1 point
  34. So yeah I made the front half of a new exhaust for my 1KZTE Pit Stop made the rear half And fuck it has made a drastic difference to the van!! Sounds tough, not stupid loud (VTNZ inspector reckons it's just right) and has all the turbo whistle. If I ever tried to cut a gap at an intersection or whatever I used to just pump out a cloud of black smoke while it thought about accelerating, but now the turbo keeps up with the diesel pump so no cloud just GO.
    1 point
  35. I also did turbo diesel stuff this weekend, plus T’ing a TD27 Nissan Datsun D21. First time playing with turbos, almost at the stage of @Raizer’s exhaust work ^ Acquired box of turbo bits from a Terrano, top end gasket kit and the desire to go up hills in not second gear. Unfortunately upon removing NA manifold (after fighting a downpipe stud for hours and cutting it off) found the two rear studs were actually bolts, m12 fine thread not the m10 coarse like the rest. One was actually missing and the second barely in there, hence the exhaust leak onto the firewall I hadn’t really noticed. however luckily @mo999was coming up to visit so brought along a really nice Wurth Timesert kit took a bit of effort to drill the broken studs out nicely as they’d been attacked before but got there and wound in some M10 inserts, they were a little long so just flappy disc’d them flush. The tap in the set cut the cast head really well. Used a nut as a locknut so the insertion tool wouldn’t bottom out and ruin the end of the insert as it was broken off unfortunately. Got an oil line made up after chipping out the wrong part of the oil filter housing to get oil feed for the turbo. Same shop was able to supply a bung for the fitting I took out needlessly however. Factory fitted drain bung used here too, had a fitting in stock for this. Sunday Mitre10 / Repco trip for bolts that work with the new inserts and longer ones needed for turbo manifold. turn key and it goes! Makes all the right noises even. Just need to get the correct silicone intake hose as the one I grabbed was too big and wind up the fuel pump a little. Then exhaust…
    1 point
  36. Spoiler on to keep that raw power to the ground hahah
    1 point
  37. I have all three of those. Great combination for fuel economy though. Getting 5.5-6 L/100km around town with current configuration
    1 point
  38. Go it home recently and thought it would be rude not to give it a start - only supplied a coil, stuck some fuel in and away it went! Raw Fiat 650 big-block power - it seems to be a sweet runner and will make a nice upgrade from the 500 that I already have.
    1 point
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