Sunday, May 25, 2014

K.I.S.S. on the Rear

Often used and often forgotten acronym in IT is "K.I.S.S.": Keep It Simple (and) Stupid.
Grabbed a plastic sleeve used to fit bolts on walls and cut it to size. Got the size right at the third attempt. Bolts tightened and now I have the fog light in place, correctly angled, without more messing with aluminium scraps.
The session was small and most of the remaining time was spent looking at tasks ahead and trial fitting things. Trial fitted the rear wings. They fit quite OK (or I'm lowering standards as I get near the end). I could almost fit it straight away as is...
Then I unpacked the leather boot cover and looked into the buttons that I have to fix to the rear to button the cover to. They are held with rivets, so I'm not worried about having to look for yet another tool.
So, planning next tasks, by the correct order... 1) Open the sikaflex and fix front wings in place; 2) Fix rear with sikaflex; 3) Crimp loom wires, connect to rear lamps and close them; 4) Jack the car up and rivet the rear underside (as per instructions); 5) Drill rear for filler cap bolts; 6) Drill rear for boot cover buttons.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Continuing with Rear of Car

Another session dedicated to the rear panel. Started with masking up to mark where plate and fog lights should go. Regarding the fog light, to run in Portugal it has to be on the left but for the UK's IVA it has to be on the right. I marked and drilled on both sides. After IVA I'll install a reversing light on the UK's holes. Using an old licence plate I had, tested how it would look.

After fitting the plate and fog lights, took the rear to the car and checked how the fog light had to be. The problem is that the rear has a slope and the fog light must be perpendicular to the road. So it has to take some wedge behind to make it stay in place. With a piece of scrap aluminium I made a part to go behind the light and that should do the job. Using the mobile phone with the inclinometer app, could check when the light was on the correct position. Unfortunately, the part I made was not a good fit, requires more work and I didn't have more time.

Still had time to look into the rear loom and check what connectors I need to add to the shop list.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

TO-DO List for Track

Time to get organised... A list of tasks needed to take the car to a track. And, where something is needed, what is so that I can organise a shopping spree (mostly ordering online from the UK due to differences in prices, I believe).

  • Bleed brakes properly
  • Finish rear of car
    • Drill for fog light on both sides and put it on the left for now
    • Drill for license plate light and fix it
    • Crimp wires on loom for the needed fittings
      • SHOP LIST: 10 spades and 10 covered females (blue)
    • Fit rear (sikaflex 221 arrived)
    • Drill for and fit filler cap bolts
    • Drill for and rivet boot cover buttons
  • Put on front wheels' cycle wings (sikaflex 221 arrived)
  • Put on rear wheels' wings
    • Trim to fit
    • Drill for stops and indicators
    • Fit to the car
  • Service the engine
    • SHOP LIST: At least 3,5L of Oil - API grade SF or SG (SAE 10W40)
    • SHOP LIST: Oil filter (i.e. HiFlo HF 303) - http://www.texoleo.com/
    • SHOP LIST: Air filter (i.e. HiFlo HFA1901)
    • SHOP LIST: Spark plugs (i.e. NGK CR9EH-9 or NGK CR9EHIX-9)
    • SHOP LIST: Gap-filler tool
    • SHOP LIST: Oil filter wrench
    • Do the service
  • Re-tighten headlight bolts (this is an issue with having a shortened rack; wheels hit headlights on full lock...)
  • Re-tighten front wheel nuts
    • May require taking wheels out, filing bent threads on studs and new nuts

Friday, May 2, 2014

Rear of the Car

Took a vacation day and spent some hours on the car. Main task was to work the rear fibreglass part.

Spent some hours trimming it to fit correctly on the car. Had to trim near the rollbar stays, to clear the shocks behind the wheels and for the tow hook to clear on the rear. It was time consuming so that it would look well, but it was worth it.

Then I marked where the fuel filled should go. Using the cork seal of the filler cap as template, marked the rear to be drilled. Using the circular cutting adapter on the drill, cut the circle. Since the tool is not precise, I left a bit of a margin. Spent some extra time with the sanding head on the dremmel triming it so that the filler cap would fit the hole. The final result is on the pictures below.
Then I looked into the other two things that must go on that part: fog light and license plate light. Regarding the fog light, this must be on the road side of the car. That means on the left side in Portugal but on the right side in the UK. Since I want to get the car road-legal in the UK, I need to comply with those rules. But I want to drive the car here with safety. I was wondering what to do and ended up sending an email to Steve at Aries. He replied saying the light had to be on the centre or the right but advising for me to put it on the right and later move it to the left and put the reversing light (that the car was not going to have) on the right, using the same holes. This sounds like a great idea, so it's what I'll be doing next time.