Saturday, November 10, 2007
An indifference to life in general
Work is as tough as ever, my health has been suffering a bit of late and family issues seen to be getting more complex and frustrating. Not to mention college which has moved up a gear and left me feeling vulnerable and a little stupid.
The MG has been left well and truly bottom of my priorities, occasionally flapping and waving its errant blue poly cover whenever rain and wind appears.
The weather since my last post has been very good, however my drive and enthusiasm has not, so several weeks have been wasted. I feel I'm going to regret this when winter finally arrives together with enthusiasm, cash and happiness.
However I'm determined not to let the car be one of the many abandoned projects for sale on E-bay. I must say my doppelganger Rick has given me the impetus not to fail as he is restoring a real basket case and is making a good job of it in similar circumstances, if not with a little more cash and garage.
So why the depression Fufferfour ? you ask.
Well I don't know really.
A level physics at college did not help. Full of young kids all able to grasp thirty five ways of transposing formulae, knowing the answer is in Nm, m/s ( -2) Kj or wotsits.
The other evenings are not the same as I feel its a waste of time as they are catering for the newbies ( combined class from the two last year) who are a year behind a small minority in class.
Still Biology continues to be good and I'm beginning to understand how all the body parts work together.
Work wise has not see an influx of machine orders, the ones won have took ages to build and the other side of the biz has seen a few small victories over the competition. Still its a hard and lonely life on the road with such a large area to cover.
Seven days in Dusseldorf working the "k" show proved to be very tiring and not as exciting as previous. Staying with an old couple in the suburbs was really nice but our new French owner had decided to gatecrash over the weekend so all my French colleagues were very tense and very well behaved, almost boring, for my liking. It still took me at least five days to physically and mentally recover. I think this was the start of the great depression.
That and the lack of activity from British industry on the stand.
The wife and kids continue to argue, bicker, winge, demand and generally frustrate any attempts I have of a happy life.
One event of note in our household is the arrival of Ralph and Ruby. Two tiny kittens that look like darkly striped Tigers. How we love the way they frolic with their tiny skinny legs and button noses.
How I hate the smell emanating from the Poo tray in the dining room.
Still, that was a few months ago and now they are turning into whirling dervishes of mass destruction. It's still funny to see their antics though. Unfortunately their poo still stinks the house out. Roll on Feb when they can leave the house for the big bad world outside.
The MG was left with a long strip of about 1" wide cut from the floorpan where it meets the outer sill, and the last 3" of the outrigger cut away. I've since bought a new outrigger and jacking point during a brief diversion to the MGOC last month. Whats difficult is welding the repair panel ( Cut from the opposite sides unused repair panel) in. The steering wheel is in the way. I tried for about 2 hours to bash it upwards from its splines without damaging the soft plastic base. It transpires one of the famous BL service tools ref BL-vb10073 part 6a is required. I say famous because no one has ever seen any of the recommended service tools. There is also two further small holes in the drivers side floor. One near the rear spring hanger, which has for some reason been repaired previously without trimming the excess steel away, and another at the base of the transmission tunnel/floorpan, near where your left foot would rest. I don't think these will present too much difficulty though. ...........................famous last words !
I have a inner rear arch panel to fit ( Birthday present in May) together with a new rear wing and maybe rear sill repair section and complete outer sill ( yet to be purchased). I also need to fabricate a section of about 10" long with two 90 degree bends to repair the window frame base where the wing is welded to.
Then the major bodywork is almost complete....................hehe.....easy word almost !
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Getting there
More soon avid readers
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Rust........in all the wrong places !
The upturned flap on the castle rail is going to be tricky to repair. Its in good condition.
However, its the top most part of three layers of steel. The next layer is the front bulkhead ( rusty where cut away) and behind that is the upturned flap on the end of the inner sill.
Also another tricky part is the end of the membrane. I cut it away a bit and bent it out to investigate the inside.
I think I may replace the first two or three inches of this and it will allow prior access to the end flappy area.
In a fit and flurry of DIY we have re-painted the whole of the dining room.
Well, wifey started it.......all ar*e about face and in a terrible mess. Still credit to her she stuck in there and cried HELP when it got tough.
So, early last Saturday I got stuck in, moved shelves and heavy objects etc, and completed it by Sunday late lunchtime
Trouble is now though she's already planned another two rooms for the next few days, for the same treatment. Cunning devil has been saving it for my Hols without letting on. I'm sure it was all a scheme to keep me away from the MG. I think she knows how to make motor brushes wear and welding gas to evaporate ( witchcraft ?..... feminine intuition or just plain bad luck ?)
Considering I'm on holiday now for two weeks and spending them at home I can't see where the rest/relaxation is going to come................................Ha!! Wifey says...........spend a day in my shoes anyday you like Mr " I've had a long busy day at work, too tired to do DIY but enough energy to fiddle with your hobby" ( No....."hobby" is not a euphemism for that precious and rewarding universal boys toy we discovered in early teens)
Once that round of DIY is now complete I removed some more engine ancillaries and even had the foresight to "borrow" a large plastic storage box from work ( we specialise in machinery to print them so we have lots skulking around the factory)
It looks rather empty in there.
Whilst Wifey is still to the forefront this holiday I used some female logic on her !!
And guess what................................................................It worked.
As I explained how much the three part LH sills cost and my joy at not having to buy all three , hence SAVING on this part of the project, I can now go and buy another RH rear wing complete like last time, you remember dear, back in May, my birthday, when we had a fun day out together and visited the MG hive............
Yes dear, what fun that was............we'll go again soon. But not until you've finished all the decorating, spent time away in Chester next week on a shortened holiday, been to see your beloved team play with No 1 son, and with whats left you can buy all the panels you want.
Well it sort of worked. Lets get in the good books first then apply more tactics.
More soon.........Thanks for the link Rick
Friday, August 03, 2007
If only I'd waited........or been a little less impatient
This is a view looking forward at the A Post top. Worrying and scary.
Thursday, August 02, 2007
Go here, It's the funniest thing I've read in a long time
Its right up my street as its toilet humour( Laxatives actually) at its best.
Stick with it and read all the posts by Blu-Tone.
Its actually from a Mountain Bike message board.
One day 'Ill tell my funny story of a hospital visit. I'd have to embellish it somewhat but it would not be a patch on how Blu-Tone tells his !!!!
Link = http://www.singletrackworld.com/forum/read.php?f=2&i=3145351&t=3141618#reply_3145351
Sunday, July 29, 2007
Tool trouble then rapid progress
It involved bending a section of the curved rear valance ( above the square hole) then welding in place and having a 5/10mm lip to place the flat plate onto.
The large vertical weld is where the rear valance and wing end did not meet exactly.
I placed a strip of steel approx 1" wide to the rear, bent to fit the curve and welded inplace.
I managed to fill most of the non meeting edges with weld.
The flat plate that rests in the base of the pointy thing and upto/on the rear boot corner was quite tricky. I got through lots of cardboard making the right shape template.
Still, it all went very well with no probs...............the secret to welding is grind all the things nearby shiny, get a good earth and listen to the weld..............like rapidly cooking bacon.
The only Blot on the landscape was the angle grinder dying.
Ma in Law bought it for me last x-mas from screwfix. Not a top make ( NOTE..always buy Bosch if your serious) but its been the most used tool and definitely a requirement.
However, one day it just did not switch on.
Checked the fuse....ok
Checked the kitchen socket....ok
Unpluged and removed the disc and guard...........scary stuff as this tool scares the life out of me.
Then I noticed two protrusions each side of the main body with a large screwdriver slot in the end. Removed these and the commutators sprang forth with a tiny blob of an excuse for a carbon block.......................Disaster, should I persue the probably frustrating and longwinded course of new parts through Screwfix, or should I source locally.
Anyway, since the rains was still with us I decided on local. B&Q ect, shed no light or idea on tool spares.
In fact I dont think any of the staff even knew what a motor commutator was.
Now, may I get on my high horse here. B&Q ect may be cheap, convenient and always open but there not a patch on" proper" hardware places. We have two in my town.
One just like"open all hours" for hardware only. Its amazing. Ask one of the elderly staff for a lock and they will have it all, and explain about 2,3 and 5 lever mortices, ease of installation and price and insurance complications and reliability. Same goes for aluminium ladders, parrafin,
Chicken wire, hinges, wheelbarrows, hammers, bolts and screws + trillions of other stuff.
All served by people friendly and happy and willing to talk and dressed in regulation stores issue Brown smock. Thats just one place.
The other place is for things electrical/electronic.These guys know it all, have it all, but are on a slightly different planet. It scares me a little.
So in I waltz with one mangled commutator. Have you got one of these ?
No, but we have on similar that you can "modify"
Well, for £2.30 why not.
Thats when the probs started. The carbon block was too large so I filed it with my swiss file, on the worktop in the kitchen.......................Big mistake, the dust is immoveable and gets everywhere. Wifey not happy.
Moved outside to workmate and rushing due to fact that imminent heavy storm due.
Still difficult to insert and remove carbon block. Then cover screw would not screw in totally.
Snipped spring shorter. Still no joy. Bent copper ends from carbon block/copper wire in several shapes, still no joy. However, shaking said grinder did momentarily show some life.
Anyways, to cut a long story short I buggered one and re-used the old one which was OK and fiddled the other eventually after lots of shaking and "gentle taps on the plastic retaining screw".
It now works...................thank **ck for that. It was almost touch and go between throwing it away and being electricuted in the rain outside.
Now we've had some respite in the rain the progress above has been made and not a small amount of filling and sanding.
Look......................................rapid progress.
Hours of sanding the rear lower valance applied by the previous owner left no nasty horror sories. Only a 50p sized hole in the very centre of the R/H crossmember end. Easily remedied by some fancy shaping of a 1mm thick steel and good welding/ filling skills.
Even after a good coat of primer some low spots were evident, so another round of filling and sanding. I must say this is very ffffrustrating. The different grades a sandpaper, sanding block, dust, mess, armache and annoyance that a pristine shape don't emerge.
So I moved onto removing the complete exhaust. Easy enough on the length of the car.
Easy enough on five of the six nuts under the manifold although three were a bit fiddly.
The six'th (NOT SIKTH, which is how annoying people pronounce it) however seems impossible to get to. The shaft of the ratchet extension is too thick, the engine base/sump flange won't allow the the socket to sit on fully since the extension is not perfectly vertical.
So a point to ponder on whilst the wifey tries to fill my head with DIY projects and things to do of a summer day in the garden.
More soon folks......................oh by the way visit Ricks site.........He's got more money and tools than me and is making a real good job of it.
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
A different corner
Since the car is being converted to chrome bumpers I have to add the RH side pointy thing at the base of the lights. This is another item I purchased NEW from MGB Hive a few months ago on a rare spending spree. I actually comes complete, so I just chopped off half.
I have to add a couple of patches to base of rear valance where its welded to inner boot tray .
The fiddly bit is the horizontal section inside the pointy thing and up to the valance.
Mine has completely rusted away under the gauze and deep body filler that was there.
Still, I'm becoming quite accomplished at cutting cardboard templates, jigsawing sheet steel, grinding and welding. Thats for the coming weekend if we have no rain or something that resembles summer.
Must stop complaining though,as last year when it was red hot ( ah.. a distant memory) I couldn't be bothered to make a start on cutting, welding and grinding.
Just to keep it interesting here's another photo of the rear end. Note the lower valance, completely covered in filler by the previous owner. Had a little poke around and spotted rust at the bumper mounting holes. So, maybe I need to sand all this off before starting the above. If its bad news though that means a complete rear lower valance at £80 quid, ouch !
That reminds me. Since I,m over 18 months into the project I decided to have a review of the most useful tools to date. This is prompted by the fact that when I started I had absolutely no tools. In fact it never occurred to me that I would need Imperial sockets and spanners
Well it did really occur, since I'd worn out at least one toilet seat reading all things MG.
So here's the list, in order of usefulness for restoring old BL cars on a budget :-
1/. Trim tool remover.
Its a cross between a narrow paint scraper and a wide screwdriver. I got it for free as a print sample during a customer visit. I use it all the time for a/. Poking rusty holes, b/. separating spot welds, c/. smoothing bubbly paintwork, d/. removing underseal and rubberised gooey stuff, e/. prising panels and stuck down trim bits, f/. Phillips and standard screw removal. g/.wrapping J cloth round to clean inside light lenses and various parts.
2/. Penetrating Oil
As a matter of habit and long standing ritual I spray every nut and bolt I can see regardless of when I'm working on them or not. This is done at least every 2 weeks.
3/. Trolley jack
The cars been up/down so many times in so many places this has proven invaluable together with the axle stands. Remember I have no garage to work in so positioning the car for long periods is important.
4/. Electric 4-1/2" Hand Grinder
Scary tool to use. Very noisy. Needs love and attention and several types of discs. The Flappey layered one has been good but also the thin slicing disc is just as valuable. Good for heavy steel removal, light polishing of steel, de-rusting and shaping steel.
5/. Hammerite Ku-Rust
When panels are inaccessible and too awkward to remove/replace or just covered in surface rust, just paint it on and it does its stuff. I use it loads.
6/. Heavy Aluminium faced hammer. Nuff said.
7/. Quality Imperial socket set.
See earlier posts for my folly at cheap and cheerful
8/. The wonderful Mr Porter and his MG restoration guide, closely followed by the DVD of the wonderful Mr Mark Evans "Is born" series of MG restoration.
9/. E-bay My main source of tools and parts, especially the MIG welder.
10/. Time and money.....................unfortunately I have very little of either.
More next week folks,
Sunday, July 08, 2007
How good it is to see it looking like a car again........Its given me a real sense of achievement.
Next session should see the door hung, sort of, maybe finally or time to reconsider the phillips screws again, maybe leave them.
Wing fixed with all new shiney screws and bolts.
Sill finished ( still some slight filler spots to add to get nice even gaps) and to wing too, suffering collateral damage from being removed and trial fitted too may times.
Then weld rear wing and turn attention to rear of car..........Yes a new chapter, hopefully.
Friday, July 06, 2007
Its a little damp outside dear
The last two weekends, nay weeks, has seen torrents of rain fall, all day,all night and in between. During last Mondays deluge a quick glance at the MG and its forlorn flapping blue poly cover saw lots of rain get inside. Mid-day off to B&Q to get a new Poly cover( in the pouring rain) .
My present cover has a hole where the roof section has an ariel base protuding.
Despite having the clever idea of wedging an old tennis ball on it, the constant removing and tie-ing down has made it as firm as a vicars handshake. Not to mention the elastic bungee cords frayed to within an inch of their life. In fact on Sunday the poor old MG spent the evening till Mon Morn with the cover hiding between the fence and the driveway gate.
Fortunately I got the last blue Poly sheet at B&Q and cheap it was too (£ 3.99) .
The trouble was thought.................................Its Huge !!!!
3 metres x 4 metres. Seemed OK when I bought it. But try covering a car with it in the pouring rain, using frayed and limp bungee cords and a howling wind.
I ended up using about 70 metres of string, over, under, around, between, up and round the MG. It looked like a drunkard had tried to wrap up a Holly bush there was so much Blue poly cover. However, it made it water proof ready for the onslaught or rain we had, er........still having actually.
Prior to thison Saturday, I did remove the front wing several times to try and get a good fit between the curvy scuttle base and wing top edge............ Impossible............!!!!
In desperation I fixed the front wing with the 5/16th UNF bolt nearest the said position.
Then added filler to the join and bead ( I previously welded the bead to the wing)
So my thinking was if the join was rubbish( uneven with gaps) bolt them together, add filler, let dry, remove wing , sand to perfection and re-fit wing nicely.
WRONG
On removing wing all the filler broke off, some filler stuck to inside of wing beading and some filler was well just ..........crap.
ABANDONED...................................time for a re-think.
It needs all its bolts and holes in wing ready and clean so it can be clamped tightly, then re assess.
So, on a trip to the far SE corner of our wind and rain swept counrty I diverted via Cambridgeshire to the MGOC.
I actually bought some new ( YES NEW ) stuff, a wing fitting kit containing all the correct screws , washers and bolts. Nice and shiney.............Lovely, and only £ 6.25 !
Also got the 5/15th UNF Nut which I had to gring off the wing when refurbing it and another nut 1/4 UNF which has a sheared bolt in it on the wing.
Whilst there I also bought the headlight re-enforcing panel. This part took the best part of a whole day to remove from the wing as it was rusty and deep inside the wing.
So...............................My plan is simple.
Fit both new nuts by mig welding them in place.
How to remove the existing nuts with broken bolts in is another story.
Then fit the wing with all the bolts and nuts. To assist matters I even bought a 5/16 UNF tap.
Please dont faint, its not new. It was £1.99 + 99p p&P on..........yes you've guessed good old E-bay.
So when the rain and wind stops I'll get busy. Oh and do the sanding of the B post too.
Sunday, June 10, 2007
A little more of all life's joys and irritations
I know the gap between the sill and b post base is a little large, but, well there really is no answer. When taking off the old sill the gap was even larger, I remember distinctly seeing all the lead loading ( Yes Lead Loading) running away as I ground through it. So It must have been made that way at good old Abingdon ( Swindon actually is where the bodies were assembled)
The front wing gap at the same spot is also same size.............WE really did know how to build cars, eh !
The gap is now full of the dreaded filler ( No I,m not going to spend several months learning how to lead load) and its waiting to dry as I write this.
I did go a bit mad with the filler and covered several spot weld and the rear wing top beading seam. So next post will be all about sanding filler........maybe.