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Unkel Kunkel

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Posts posted by Unkel Kunkel

  1. That looks good!

    New springs do seem to vary in spec.- not just in the spring rate , but in curvature, weight, thickness of the leaves - and also the size of   those ‘ dimples” for the buttons - insulators or whatever you call them.There were some aftermarket springs  made  with no  buttons or recesses ie the dimples to hold them and  the edges of the spring leaves in some cases were sharply cut. ie were’t  chamfered .

    Those buttons closely resemble my DIY ones,  except mine are UHMWPE

    Getting the “swing spring”  secured in the  spring “box”  can be quite a wrestle.

    I battled  with G clamps and various levers etc. for most of an afternoon.

    The tendency for the outermost buttons to fall out  ceases  once   the drive  shafts, shock absorbers etc are all connected up  because as the lower leaf spring of the “swing spring”  set up can’t then travel as far downwards.

  2. On 10/05/2023 at 06:50, johny said:

    Believe the OP has already tried this (see post above) and anyway he wants a 2" raise which is a lot to ask from new buttons....

    I saw that but noted Blubayou had tried tap washers-  which was imaginative, and then rubber ones - which didn’t fit. 

    I was relating from experience regarding buying a new spring (from one of the major suppliers)as a cautionary tale as I was surprised and disappointed to  find it was completely different spec with thicker leaves, very much heavier and didn’t fit into the space between the diff. and first leaf. I returned it  and got a refund.

    So I re-used the original spring  with UHMWPE spacers. inserting these  “buttons” did give a noticeable increase in ride height ( any  thickness you make them will be that x4 in ride height)-  though if 2” is what is needed, that does seem a lot.

     

     

  3. I would suggest at least hesitate  in changing or getting  rid of your old spring.

    Although we tend  to assume  “ new” parts  are  always better than “old”parts, “T’aint  necessarily so” in relation to these springs.

     New rear springs can vary in appearance, weight and dimensions and no doubt other areas.They don”t always  solve  problems.

    Replacing the spring “buttons” -(  the between-the spring  leaves- isolators) , can restore the car’s lost “back end stature “ effectively and very cheaply.

    The original rubber type can be replaced with far more effective and durable ones - Teflon, Nylon or UHWPE -  see E- Bay. You can make them but it is a bit of a faff.

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  4. Can’t give an opinion re Spitfire, but I have a 2006 VW Eos for which I obtained a wind deflector, the type that sits behind the occupants.Similar sort of thing in principle at least.

    I was very  surprised by the vast  difference it made.Hardly any buffeting”,  to the extent of being able to hold a normal conversation at 70 plus.

  5. 1 hour ago, johny said:

    Errr what would you recommend as a finish then Unkel - chroming😂

    If we are talking about coating metal once it has been successfully salvaged by rust conversion or rust removal, there are some  options for the amateur such as myself:

    The coating should be easily applied.i.e by someone with basic skills  and equipment.

    It should be available at reasonable cost.

    it should adhere well, preferably have a degree of anti-corrosion action, have resilience to  impact damage - favouring toughness over   hardness to avoid brittleness and cracking.

    It should be easily and cheaply “repairable”  (again with with basic skills  and equipment)

    It should be able to act as a good primer accept a cosmetic top coat and finally, under the vehicle,  a transparent wax coat of choice.

    Each to their own,   but for chassis renovation, after repairs, I used a laborious combination of numerous, repeated sessions of mechanical cleaning by needle gun and phosphoric acid applications, a final wire brushing, then hand painting with UPol Acid 8 primer.

    Top coat just body colour aerosol  then Kent wax coat spray.

    Time will tell…

     

     

     

     

     

    • Thanks 2
  6. Whilst Hammerite is tough, I found it rather brittle and liable to chip.

    Probably not a popular view, but I am not really not convinced  about powder coating.

    Based solely on  experience with things like ride on mowers, concrete mixers and other out door things I have owned, failed powder coating was the reason such items ended up being prematurely scrapped.Rust spread so very rapidly under the coating once there was the slightest bit of wear and tear and it was far more difficult to try and deal with this than with “ordinary “ paint.

  7. 1 hour ago, Colin Lindsay said:

    I use Jenolite, as I bought a huge container of it many years ago and it's still half full. I do clean the loose rust off and usually wirebrush the metal beforehand. If the part is small enough or removable, sandblasting works better although I cheat and use a rust-encapsulating paint over the blasted metal, I like the finish it gives compared to bog-standard grey primer.

     

    Rust.

    A subject  near to the hearts of old car enthusiasts especially old, old car enthusiasts !

    I used Jenolite for many years, but I now  use a Machine Mart product which is very similar.Both are phosphoric acid.

    Very effective, but unless just treating “flash” surface rusting i.e where the rust is deep, it best regarded a process  needing  repeated applications with chipping / wire brushing between each to get into the pitted areas.

    Used patiently  in this way, it will certainly give excellent results.

    It is more user- friendly  than hydrochloric acid. HCl   has nasty corrosive vapour. ( Leave something uncovered in it  overnight in your garage/ workshop and next day anything ferrous  in a 2 metre radius will have acquired surface rust).Not too kind  to your lungs either.

    There is a theory that HCL shouldn’t be used on springs because “ hydrogen” brittleness” can result- making them more liable to break.This seems to be the case for small coli  springs like return springs on throttles and brakes, but whether it is a concern for car suspension springs, I have no idea.

    731A4082-01D4-45D5-B49D-8B13AD78BF16.thumb.jpeg.5e3f0ad1c097e141028a3653c8eeed7f.jpeg

     

    The only differenceI I found is , as you can see, is that the MM version is much cheaper.

  8. The terms  are a bit confusing -  “ converters” are a different group to rust “removers” though some removers can to some extent, covert..and Loctite use the term “ neutralizer” for their  product * - which could be viewed as a “converter”

    The removers include  acid groups as hydrochloric ( the archaic term muriatic acid is still used by some ) then phosphoric , oxalic acid ( poisonous) as  “strong” acids and weaker acids such as citric, and acetic acid, as vinegar.

    The  converters are chelating agents - sort of binding agents that envelop the rust chemically and also provide a basis as a primer.

    The most widely used seem to be tannic acid and sometimes a derivative , gallic acid. When mixed with a liquid polymer this enhances the primer action.This can be a latex solution. Sometimes some   dilute phosphoric acid is added to the mix to lower the pH for the tannic acid to work more effectively and for direct effects of the phosphoric acid.

    Typically the tannic acid products goes blue /black after application to rust.

    For success the instructions have to be followed :

    1.They will fail if applied  on loose, flaking rust. 

    2. The primer action only  works on the rusted metal.

    Citrate is a bit of both, it works -as an acid -as  a remover and also has a chelating action.

    Molasses is also chelating agent. It takes as long as months to work,  I understand.

    Evapo-Rust composition is not revealed to us,  but its low toxicity, neutral pH suggests it is probably a citric acid based with  a chelating agent or several agents, ( other  than tannic acid). It is very expensive.

     

    The advantage of converters include their ease of use and low toxicity( The worst thing that tannic acid will probably do is stain your fingers very black)

    A lot depends on what is rusty and where it is.

    The encapsulator paints can  work  for inaccessible bits.Their effectiveness depends on the integrity of the that sealing coat. I would suspect that any  defect in that coating,  whether on application or acquired later, can lead to   failure.

    Ideally, If you can remove a rusty bit and can immerse it for a few hours then  go for any of the “remover”s.

    (My choice these days is Citric acid for 6-12 hours at 50- 60 C,  in an ultrasonic cleaner, It cheap, very effective, safe to use and  dispose of afterwards) 

    *  Loctite product recommend

  9. Something very cheap to make your  ultrasonic cleaner quicker and easier, save on cleaning agents and  solvents and make it a lot easier to clean afterwards, 

    just one of these:

    804C7B50-29CE-4B1E-8D7C-08C75B27B839.thumb.jpeg.2e8bcd3f67985971bff4ddd17086da67.jpeg

    Putting the items to be cleaned in a bag of  cleaning agent and then immersing in the tank with just water filled up to the usual level means its quicker, cleaner and saves whatever cleaning agent your using.The crud remains in the bag, rather than in the tank.

     972ABBB2-B01B-4923-9799-ED55BF9296A2.thumb.jpeg.9b8aaa18d0f51350db775527e7b2cac0.jpeg

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 1
  10. The cheapest welding tool available:

    A DIY copper  welding ‘spoon’ gadget made from  a short length of 22 mm copper pipe off-cut  hammered flat and folded over again to give a bit of mass.

    ( I used  two copper nails used as rivets to keep copper compressed  but  this not really needed ) 

    74EC52E1-28BA-4F51-BDC3-7638EF5E20F5.thumb.jpeg.aae1ca8804f7c45d2732eddbf7c2eee6.jpeg

    Mig welding  thin metal when there is a need to fill gaps or holes with weld can be challenging and the end result can be can a lumpy mess  that needs a lot of grinding When plug welding where you want a flat surface on the reverse of the weld this also helps. 

    Placing this gadget firmly behind the work, conducts some heat away  from the weld - avoiding further burn- through and allows you easily fill the gap with weld at at the same time leaving  a flat surface on the  reverse of the weld.

    Using scrap pipe I think it would be possible to make ‘custom” spoon shapes where access is difficult.

    • Like 5
    • Thanks 1
  11. 9 minutes ago, Pete Lewis said:

    i thought ???     they all got a dip (submerged  )  primer before the sprayed  top coat.

    Pete

     

     I think the bonnet is original.

    it does look like that they assembled it, then dipped sprayed etc.

    There is no paint / primer under the various brackets etc.

  12.  

    Large areas of completely unpainted metal have been revealed as I start to dismantle  a Spitfire bonnet.

    Presumably they sprayed the bonnet after it had being assembled  in “ bare”metal and the paint went where it could reach.

    The lack of protection wasn’t a surprise, but the way some of these areas remain  remarkably intact after fifty years without any protection at all, certainly was.

    These were places mainly confined to the upper and inner facing aspects of the wing and the outer wheel arch.

    Lower and other areas - the familiar picture of devastation 

    Presumably, the deciding factor here  was these areas were just  relatively dry most of the time?

     

  13. I discovered only one  problem changing to  silicone brake fluid.

    One not  seen reported elsewhere.

    Sudden and unexpected - a tiny amount spilt on the floor is very slippery …

  14. Revert to plan I. = new wings

    - and also outer wheel arches…

    I had ignored what all old car enthusiasts know as a fundamental truth :

    Rust is always  far worse than it first appears.

    Someone in the past had certainly been very industrious and imaginative with lots of odd bits of metal welded in here and there and everywhere  joining the outer wheel arch and wing  in many places. All hidden, under a surprising amount of filler and thick bituminous under-seal and topped-off with something black and waxy  that might be black Waxoyl.

     

     

     

     

  15. Used mainly to locate  rather than diagnose, the metal probe end functions like the ‘big screwdriver with the wooden handle  to the ear ‘ in practice , but it transmits the sound up the tubes to  a safe distance from the machinery and the ear pieces cut out extraneous noise.

    Used in this way, probably  a cheapish one will probably work as well as a more expensive one for your intended use.

     

  16. In general, I would be wary of using alkalies on Aluminium alloys as  depending on the type of Al alloy, the results can be disappointing - it can go black.

    The Al  oxide removers tend to be acids rather than alkalies  - Phosphoric (a U.S. commercial product is 24% phosphoric)  hydrochloric, oxalic, citric.Some advocate citric or citric and acetic together.A detergent/ degreasing agent seems to be added to the mix.

    Oxalic acid is  found  in  rhubarb , spinach etc  etc but the amounts are very tiny.

    Even Popeye’s  heroic  spinach intake would be  OK for him, but the amounts used for cleaning purposes  and these  sort of jobs are huge in comparison and are best regarded  as poisonous. 

    Once the dull oxide layer is removed, the bright alloy is exposed and the oxidation process resumes.

    It is slow though, and it reaches a stage where the oxide layer itself slows  the process.

    Keeping that initial brightness will depend on inhibiting that  oxidation  - by keeping the Al away from oxygen - by polish, oil,  paint, lacquer - whatever, and keeping it polished and the protecting layer intact.

     

  17. With better weather coming, hopefully we will be out with,  and  almost certainly under our cars more ..

    The following plea about working under cars might seem  very dull and boring, but in mitigation I say it is not about being risk-averse , it is about being  risk-aware , which is  a very different thing.

    According to HSE in its March report, are the words , It will only take a minute” are the words, sometimes the last words, of people who get injured whilst working on vehicles.

    In the last 5 years in the UK. there have been 13 fatalities resulting  of vehicles  falling on top of  people.

    I make no apologies for repeating my cautionary tale : As a young chap, I became trapped after very, very foolishly venturing under a GT6 after removing a rear wheel.It was supported only by a scissor jack on a paving stone which wobbled.. well you can guess the rest.It happened so  fast.

    Now pinned face down, unable  to move and very aware that I was hardly able to breathe and it was getting rapidly worse,  I was approaching being just  another digit to be added to the 1976 list of similar fatalities, when miraculously  I was rescued by my  my young  wife.

    She was fast,(reassuringly, she didn’t even pause to check the life policies)

    So please, Be aware.Take a minute to be safe.

    “You can’t have too many axle stands”

     

     

    • Like 4
  18. Thanks everyone for your   views and confirming my impression that repair sections aren’t available.It has been very helpful :

    option 1.  New wings.

    materials= (original type) cost £ 134 x2 , bit cheaper are available.

    option 2. Repair wings .

    materials=  metal I already have  .. cost zero

     For   both:  (a) equipment :similar for both, cost = few litres  gas.                                                  

                        (b) time   considerable needed,  but willingly provided when available, and probably similar   for both. 

    So I am going for option 2 ……. when I get enough (b)

    -on the basis that if the results  looks really c****,  I can look again  at option 1.

     

     

  19. I know there are repair sections available for the rear wings but have not seen similar for the front - only complete wing sections for the bonnet.

    Have I  just missed them?

    Can you point me in the right direction  if there are, please?

    My spitfire has  rot in the leading edges, both sides - bad but localised.

    It doesn’t really seem to  merit changing the whole wing sections.

    If there are no such things as repair sections out there, I may use the technique shown in Martin Thaddeus’s  excellent book ‘How to Repair Classic Car Bodywork’

     

    17AAB72A-F3B2-45C4-B049-D46C59C14340.thumb.jpeg.b08aeaa101c095f1eb142c32883c2326.jpeg

     

    like this:

    388EDA9E-8D9A-49BA-991B-A2018F8CED3C.thumb.jpeg.0de574df7f09300ed410c8a4790875a4.jpeg

     

  20. Well sort of ‘spotted’ -  not the actual car, but a bit of paperwork.

    My Spitfire was purchased from a lady who bought the car new in 1973.

    It came with a thick wad of paperwork.

    Today, amongst the paper I came across a receipt for her purchase of a different  vehicle: 

    for the purchase of her previous  car bought new in Devon in 1970.

    (She traded this car in 1973 when she bought my present Spitfire) 

    It was also Spitfire:

    a 1970 model reg  TOD 633J .

    colour ‘Saffron’

     

    ( referred to oddly as a ‘Triumph Herald  - Spit  fire’  on the receipt) 

     

    It is still registered according to DVLC

    Is it owned by a TSSC member ?

    -it is quite a significant part of that cars history  

     

    if you’re  out there, please get in touch.

     

    Andrew

     

     

    • Like 1
  21. Difficult to quantify, but they certainly do get wet and wetter from slightly glistening to there is a discernible layer of  of petrol on them.

    In the  olden  days,  there were priming ports on the cylinder(s),and even sometimes incorporated into the sparking plugs themselves, through which a small amount of neat petrol,  say half a teaspoonful, was injected to help start up.

    Later, car handbooks used to warn  of the consequences of running the engine with the “choke left out” as the excess petrol would wash away lubricant from the piston/cylinder  walls and cause premature wear. 

  22.  

    I found a cheap option for making a tunnel gasket and a material that   was very easily available -under my feet, you could say,

    from B&Q interlocking garage foam floor tiles.The material is about ideal in terms of thickness and compressibility.

    It would be some months before I was due to put the tunnel in, so I tested strips of the material in engineoil/gear oil,and petrol/gear oil.

    The petrol had evapourated from the mix  after a couple of months and the material showed signs of collapse but there  were no signs at all of any ill effects to  the oil samples even after more than year of immersion.

    CF98E71E-4AA5-4E80-969F-4A2C54F20C8D.thumb.jpeg.d93a7dd867b31360d5013654da9a295d.jpeg

     

    The pattern- the little raised bits,can  be removed by using a bench grinder but probably not necessary.

    A single tile gives a vast amount to play with until you get the best shape for the job.

    Glued in place with impact adhesive (over self adhesive sound /heat reflecting material):

    E44F736F-EC51-496B-A32D-4CADE2EDACD7.thumb.jpeg.6c930aaf081dbfbba1e205e3a9b7aff2.jpeg

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