Twosheds
Darth Vader
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jdubois said:Today is the day! I'll have pictures later, and if I'm lucky I'll have an answer too.
I'm all on tenterhooks!
jdubois said:Today is the day! I'll have pictures later, and if I'm lucky I'll have an answer too.
Understood on the "shipwrights"; however, there's getting carried away on what initially was to be one, simple task, and there's the practicality of correcting potential problems (especially while they're more accessible and the car is "down" anyway) before they come back to bite you!jdubois said:This thing was supposedly "professionally restored". Well, I'm finding all kinds of weirdness. The speedo cable was held together with duck tape. Lots of missing hardware. Some wrong hardware (including some metric stuff!). Incorrect electrical connectors, with crimps so bad they were barely holding together, some kind of homemade 'cereal box' type gasket on the thermostat, etc... I've gotta be very careful not to succumb to shipwrights too badly!
bgbassplyr said:At least now the engine doesn't have to be torn down.
At least short-term, perhaps you can find some "fender washers" and trim them as necessary? Or even make your own out of sheet metal? Frankly, I wouldn't go to a great amount of effort for something that gets covered up by carpeting. So long as you can get something to help hold the bolt head, you should be fine.jdubois said:I've got to figure out what to do with my transmission tunnel cover though. Many of the bolt holes are torn and/or elongated such that they'll no longer actually hold the bolt head, even with an oversized washer. Anybody deal with this before?
Andrew Mace said:Or even make your own out of sheet metal?
Hatman said:A leak down test would be much easier to do and, IMHO, give you more/better information than a compression test.
Hatman said:A leak down test would be much easier to do and, IMHO, give you more/better information than a compression test.