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Jul 21, 2010 20:21:44 GMT
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Scandinavians (especially norwegians) have to look after their cars as new ones are so eye-wateringly expensive. My daily, a passat from 2001, cost me the thick end of 10 grand (yes 10 000 english pounds) just over a year ago! and that was a cheap povo 1.6 so you can imagine the prices of new cars here. Car rationing was only lifted here in 1960 and even then it wasn't easy or cheap to buy a car. Before this time you had to get permission to own and drive a car. So my 1964 Westy was probably very rare, very expensive and very well looked after. History lesson over. Managed to get a couple more pieces of the jigsaw back in place today too. Struggled a bit in the beginning as there was no way of lighting the work area with my hands and body in the way and I couldn't see the join I was supposed to be welding.... so I came up with this solutiuon, an LED headlight torch which I wrapped round my welding torch supporting hand, worked a treat. My OCD won't allow me to do anything else but douse this whole car in waxoil when I eventually done welding.
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Last Edit: Jun 30, 2017 19:04:28 GMT by omnipod
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Davenger
Club Retro Rides Member
It's only metal
Posts: 7,272
Club RR Member Number: 140
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Jul 21, 2010 21:57:30 GMT
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That's flippin genius
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Holy caramba, yet another few months whizz by and time down the workshop limited due to summer hols, work, kids... yup generall everyday life, BUT i have managed a few hours here and there and progress has been made, just not as much as i would have liked. Firstly i slapped the carburettors back together (yeah OK, many days careful OCD reassembly) and put them back on the engine, and took them off again when the throttle spindle jammed in the carburettor body, scratched my head a bit, fixed the offending carb and then put them on again. Reassembled Reattached As i might have mentioned before it is things like the carb linkage that just make me smile like a maniac, a world away from todays electric sensor controlled throttles. Not even a throttle cable. I must admit that it took me a few goes to get it working properly though. A new battery was purchased and after an almost nasty moment when i 'forgot' that this car is positive earth it was time for the first start up in about two years. It lives, the back box is missing so sounding a bit louder than usual but it is finally mobile again. So party over and it was time to turn it round and get ready to sort the body work out on the other side. Wheel arch with underseal, pass me the scraper. a tedious hour or so and a lot of it was gone :-) With the added bonus of actually not finding that much rust, much better than the other side was anyway. Now like most of you fellow RR'ers i have a tendency to let my mind wander while my car is immobile and start thinking about other stuff i really shouldn't, like new wheels. The Austin's PCD is 5x5" so there isn't really a lot of choice out there, the most common change for these is Rover P5 rostyles but meh why follow the crowd and besides the chances of finding a set of those over here is practically zero. So after good google session the most likely candidate was wheels from a Chevy Astro van. So i waited and waited and waited until a set came up for sale and 400 Kroner (40 quid) later i owned a set of grubby Astro wheels just to see if they would fit. Original wheels are 14" with a negative offset of about 30 and these chevy ones are 15" with zero offset. As you can see to give me a break during the tedium of underseal scraping i took 10 mins to try on the wheels. So? waddaya all think, does it work, i know it would have been easier to judge if i had lowered the car down again and actually got the rims into the arches but i'm an idiot and didn't think. couldn't resist a quick spray of black to the wheel centre just to get an idea of what it might be like. So the car is mobile again i have trial fitted the 'new' wheels - mojo is high.
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Last Edit: Jun 30, 2017 19:02:11 GMT by omnipod
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Absolutely top notch work there mate, the welding and repair sections you've made are excellent. I assume you'll give the car a full repaint in time, hopefully in the original black? 'Not sure on wheels yet, as you said without tyres and sitting on the ground it's difficult to comment. I know it's all been done before, but I do think though this would look fantastic lowered on a set of banded 15" steels with fairly low profile tyres. COOOOL.
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Aug 26, 2011 17:23:47 GMT
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As always time has whizeed by and i haven't much to show for the last 6 months, although i have bought another car so there is some excuse. I finally gave in and decided i had to remove the wing if i was to banish the rust once and for all. It's a shame to take apart what is really such an original solid car but I just wouldn't have access unless the wing came off. So off it came after first having to remove the door to reveal not such a bad inner wing, it did require a couple of small patches but nothing bad at all. It was at the footwell i was most concerned about where the wing joined the outrigger and floor panels. I wasn't disappointed, more digging required the rusted outrigger to come off as well as a section of the floor and the end of the sill, inner and outer. The outrigger came off to reveal a rusty chassis section, so more cutting out there too. The upper part of the floor and the chassis section patched. Time to get on with putting the end of the sill back together. cardboard template for the new outrigger.... transfered to steel. and welded. There is still a floor patch left to do inside but i might well cut more out so i can see inside more of the chassis and outriggers. The next step will be welding back on the good bits of the outer sill i cut off and making up new patches for the bits that are rusty.
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Last Edit: Jun 30, 2017 18:52:39 GMT by omnipod
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Lopez
East Midlands
Posts: 867
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Aug 26, 2011 20:35:21 GMT
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Really impressed with your methodical fabrication and repairs. Like you say, tonybmw has genuinely given a huge number of people here the confidence to actually try making a repair panel or two - myself included.
Keep up the good work!
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mk2cossie
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 3,060
Club RR Member Number: 77
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Aug 27, 2011 22:24:25 GMT
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nice looking repair work there ;D and i think the chevy wheels work quite well, although not convinced with black centres tho and i know what you mean about the engineering on the older cars, with all the brass parts. just shows up how hastily new motors are made
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Aug 27, 2011 22:35:13 GMT
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Epic wheel fitment. Epicker car.
Wibble-tastic.
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les509
Part of things
Compulsive collector
Posts: 526
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Aug 28, 2011 18:43:50 GMT
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Think the wheels will look good if the centres go gloss black. Polished rim ftw. Rozzies have been done to death, but they look so good on them. Love your car bud.
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61 Jaguar Mk 10 67 Austin A60 Countryman 69 Morris 1300GT 77 Triumph 2500S 84 Mk2 Granada Ghia Est 86 BMW 635 CSi 87 BMW 635 CSi
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Aug 28, 2011 19:45:06 GMT
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Thanks for the comments, i'm not sure about the wheels myself either, luckily it's not a decision i will be needing to make this year anyway, there is no way i'm getting time to get it on the road before winter. I'll press on with the bodywork as fast as family commitments allow (child number 3 due next week ;D ) and hopefully i'll have a complete car by next spring. Just have to hope the panel beating / welding the mojo keeps as high as it is now.
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Sept 8, 2011 23:18:15 GMT
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Great work! I love the way you use old computer components as tools to assist your welding endevours
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1967 citroen azu 250 1988 lada 2104 combi 1970 citroen azu 250. 1984 mitsubishi l300 camper 1987 citroen 2cv6. 1998 daewoo matiz 1970 citroen dyane. 1996 mazda bongo 1988 citroen 2cv6. Vespa pk50 polini 102 Vespa pk50 polini 75 cc highlytuned. 1996 hyundai galloper 3.0 v6. 1988 seat marbella.1980s lada samara, Lots of bicycles..and boats an vintage hifi. Vespa pk50 xl2 needs tuning!
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Sept 23, 2011 17:32:02 GMT
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Still loving this, wheels are awesome! Keep up the good work!
Slightly O/T question - how on earth does a 2001 Passat still cost £10,000 in Norway? Do you have to pay tax on 2nd hand cars?
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Sept 24, 2011 16:34:24 GMT
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Nice car and good quality work
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Nov 20, 2014 17:52:29 GMT
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Am I allowed to just sneak back in here after my last post on this thread, a short 3 years, 2 months and 23 days ago without an explanation? Probably not. So, a couple of weeks after my last post mini-Omnipod number 3 arrived on the scene, which in a roundabout kind of way led to 3 house moves, including 4 months back in the UK, and eventually a relocation to the South coast of Norway, 450km away from my car in Oslo. Of course this also meant job changes for both me and Mrs. Omnipod. So quite an upheaval, moving once with 3 kids is a ball ache, 3 times is just stupid. All this faffing about of course has meant little time for car derived pleasures, especially when the car in question is all that way away. Still, littlest Omnipod is now 3 and we are all settled. I eventually managed to find a workshop and a storage space close to our new home so the time was right to finally get my Austin back from its, very expensive, hiding hole in Oslo. I must admit to not actually being able to live without a retro for all this time so I cheated and bought a Triumph 2500TC (I’ll need to start a thread for this too). So the Triumph is currently sitting (in lots of pieces) in my workshop space and the Austin is now stashed away in storage, so it might still be a while until I manage any work on it but at least it doesn’t seem as impossible as it did before.
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Last Edit: Jun 30, 2017 18:32:38 GMT by omnipod
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Nov 20, 2014 18:46:23 GMT
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Looking good, these cars are superb...!
Do hurry up and tell us more about your Triumph please...!!!
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***GARAGE CURRENTLY EMPTY***
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79cord
Posted a lot
Posts: 2,617
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Nov 22, 2014 12:39:47 GMT
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Good to see the thread again. & car still looks great!
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Nov 22, 2014 15:29:52 GMT
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hardrive magnets !!
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Nov 22, 2014 20:58:57 GMT
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This and the Triumph thread both bookmarked. A lovely brace of motors there.
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CaptainSlog
Part of things
Posts: 510
Club RR Member Number: 180
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What has happened with this?
Bookmarked in hope of an update - came here from your 1975 Triumph 2500TC thread.
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Nov 18, 2017 19:58:27 GMT
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I still have it and it still runs and drives.... but to my eternal shame I haven't managed to get any more done with this car yet. The Triumph project, which was never intended to be a project, has taken waaaay waaaaay longer than I had ever imagined, I also picked up the Alfa along the way so have really fallen into the classic ahem classic car trap of too many projects not enought hours in the day. In all honesty there isn't really that much more to do (yeah yeah i know) with this one and it is next in line for revival but I will have to get it moved to the workshop once the Triumph is finished which IS going to be early 2018. Here are the last pictures I have of it taken last year but I have driven it since, the brakes now need sorting though too :-( Still hope springs eternal that this too will be back on the road, dare I say 2019?
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