vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 10, 2015 20:43:14 GMT
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 10, 2015 20:44:32 GMT
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Here's what the engine bay looks like, maybe that'll help you all work it out. I've been too exhausted to even think about working it out myself.
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THE_Liam
Yorkshire and The Humber
If at first you don't succeed... HAMMERS.
Posts: 1,363
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Jan 10, 2015 20:45:31 GMT
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What happened to the "Mother of All Winters" I've been hearing about. Will it be like THE_Liam says about last year and, if I remember, "sixteen degrees of unseasonable warmth"? It was "buried under 16 inches of unseasonable warmth"
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 10, 2015 20:48:58 GMT
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It snowed sideways here for about two minutes. That was probably all we're getting.
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Jan 10, 2015 21:14:48 GMT
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It was "buried under 16 inches of unseasonable warmth" I thank you for the correction
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Battenberg
Part of things
Time for Cake....
Posts: 745
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Jan 10, 2015 21:20:24 GMT
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I like it, I would remove the wheel trims and run with silver rims and Vauxhall hub caps.... Keep it simple!
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Current Fleet: 1968 Wolseley 1000 2022 BMW 430xd MHT Coupe 2007 L200 Animal - Dog walking transport 1998 318is Coupe 2007 Mini Cooper Supercharged 1989 BMW 530 - in storage
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 10, 2015 21:39:08 GMT
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I've got some of these arriving for it next week.
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Jan 10, 2015 22:01:35 GMT
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Here's what the engine bay looks like, maybe that'll help you all work it out. same answer, 1.2 8v spi from memory 16v timing chain version came with 98my facelift
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adam73bgt
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 5,004
Club RR Member Number: 58
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Jan 10, 2015 22:02:47 GMT
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Ha I remember being carted about in the back of a Corsa B when I was younger So where does the little Vauxhall fit into your fleet then? Is the Xantia giving up some of the daily duties?
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 10, 2015 22:21:54 GMT
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I have no idea where it fits in the fleet. The Princess is my one true love, the Xantia a dependable work horse, the Renault a toy and the Corsa... no idea.
I bought this one on a bit of a whim really, not usually something I can indulge. I knew at the price I got it at that I could get it home and at least make my money back so it's a calculated risk. I wanted to reassess my teenage opinion of the Corsa B and this was an excellent way to do that.
Now I have it I want to give it some love, make it all minty clean and try and get it into a classic show locally. I've been told it does qualify for classic insurance by the previous owner so if I can get a really basic classic policy on it cheap enough I'll do that and pootle about in it for a bit while I tidy it up and make up my mind.
Once I've sorted the cosmetic issues and the brakes out I'll be in a better position to make a decision. Advisories on the last MoT - paint blisters and cracked number plate - were so minor that I reckon I can get a clean sheet on a retest.
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Jan 11, 2015 17:47:37 GMT
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usual place for the rot is the chassis rail in front wheel arch, just to rear of where the wishbone slots in. plus the rear outriggers (upper spring cups)
i found the steering quite heavy and long (1.2 arizona model which is basically same as yours but with a badge on the wing!)
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 11, 2015 18:35:51 GMT
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A cursory inspection revealed no rot in the usual places, or in any unusual places. It's very solid for a Corsa B, let alone for its miles which is reassuring. Made a start today on the deep clean and fixing some cosmetic things. Dashboard didn't need anything, I gave it a wipe over and it was already clean. The boot was a bit scruffy but a vacuum and a wipe with vinyl cleaner got that smelling nice and looking tidy. I fixed the first of the door cards, the fabric has done that thing where it lifts in a big blister where your elbow rests and was a bit scruffy. Careful application of contact adhesive and afterwards some shampoo got it all spruced up nicely. I made sure to plug the drain tubes back in too so the sunroof drains onto the road now rather than into the boot. Parcel shelf only needed a light vacuuming to get the dust off. I'm missing one of the parcel shelf strings and am on the lookout for a replacement, don't really want to buy a whole parcel shelf to replace one string. Took out the crumbling tax disc holder and inspected the damage on the driver's seat cover which can probably be blind stitched back together saving me the expense of a seat. Not yet worked out how to remove the gear gaitor, I have a Haynes manual in the post to assist on that score. Sourced: sunvisor clips x2 offside mirror casing door mirror glass x2 OEM wheel trims x4 OEM radio casette That leaves me with oil, oil filter, air filter, number plate and touch up paint to acquire so I can spend a few days getting everything tip top.
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street
Posted a lot
6.2 ft/lbs of talk
Posts: 4,662
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Jan 12, 2015 11:38:12 GMT
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That looks a tidy little B! I too wasn't overly thrilled by them but ended up with one at a price I couldn't refuse and I have been quite impressed ever since! A tidy, well presented one makes me look twice these days. Should look great once it's had your full trademark detailing treatment!
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Jan 12, 2015 11:44:03 GMT
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Looking good... That really does look like it is responding well to your thorough cleaning regime! You will have that looking pin-sharp in next to no time I'm sure...
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***GARAGE CURRENTLY EMPTY***
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THE_Liam
Yorkshire and The Humber
If at first you don't succeed... HAMMERS.
Posts: 1,363
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Jan 12, 2015 11:48:40 GMT
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Nice to see what was always a decent enough car coming out of the chav shadows, can't wait for it to happen with the Saxo, great little cars with a terrible image due to the pillocks that bought them.
I had a 1.7 diesel Corsa B a few years back when I lost my job and needed cheap transport, would burn anything and do 60mpg on a run, never broke despite never even being serviced, wasn't even that slow, good car.
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 13, 2015 17:46:07 GMT
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Mk1 Saxos already are emerging as a not-chav car, too old to be desirable by most of them unlike the later roundy headlight jobbies. Princess update. Minor update. Only got a couple of hours in on the welding today as the auto-dim mask ran out of power and the other mask is too dark. On the upside, I got some decent progress made today when I changed the wire from .8 to .6, making predictable welds a lot easier to achieve. Just a shame I didn't make the change before I'd been fighting with the thicker wire for quite so long because I reckon that prevented me from finishing this patch off today. My welding still isn't brilliant, but it's much better than it was and dresses back tidily enough. The patch is almost completely welded in. I tried out the overlapping stitch technique which I've found very difficult to get on with and reverted to stitches and seams to join them. Trouble with the overlapping stitch technique is that I seem to end up with a selection of tidy welds that have a lot of very small holes in between them which I then find virtually impossible to accurately plug. So yeah, it's progress. Princess needs to get out of the unit in a few weeks as the space is needed for other cars and work. With that in mind now that I have the welder operating reliably, I'm going to try and squeeze in a couple of hours most days to at least get this corner sorted, once this big patch is in that should be the worst of the job done. I'm going to inspect the underside and do more welding if required, tricky to do with this all being around the jacking point, I'm sure I'll figure it out.
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Rich
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 6,341
Club RR Member Number: 160
Member is Online
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Jan 13, 2015 18:48:06 GMT
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Keep practicing the overlapping weld technique. It's by far the best way to weld thin steel. It sounds like you are either not actually overlapping your weld pools or you are trying to weld for too long or at a too high power.
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 13, 2015 19:11:50 GMT
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It's me at fault on that technique, I can't seem to keep the welds close enough together reliably. On the few bits I did manage it you do get a really, really nice finish but goodness me it's going to take a lot of practice! I'll keep plodding away, I want this corner finished before February.
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Jan 13, 2015 20:02:56 GMT
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Practice on some thin scraps of metal if you can. It will really help in the long run and build your confidence for when you weld the car.
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vulgalour
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 7,287
Club RR Member Number: 146
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Jan 13, 2015 20:24:28 GMT
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I really should get some fresh metal to play with, at the moment I'm relying on a spare bonnet.
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