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JohnD

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Everything posted by JohnD

  1. Yes, that amount of play will be an MoT fail. See: http://www.motuk.co.uk/manual_220.htm Jack up the car's front and wiggle the road wheel side to side, while looking at the steering arms. Wear in the track road ends is the most likely place. Replacement is a straightforward DiY, if you follow the instructions. John
  2. The ballasted ignition system was produced to prolong the life of contact breaker points. The original 12V through a 3 Ohm coil meant that the points were carrying about 4 Amps, when that type of contact is really only fit for less than 3A. It hadn't changed in the fifty years since Charles Kettering demonstrated points ignition to Cadillac, and required a points check every 1000 miles or so. 6V through the coil and points enabled a much longer maintenance period, as the amps were halved, but would have led to a weaker spark, if the coil resistance had not also been halved. Then, later, Transistor Assisted Contacts ignition used a semiconductor, triggered by the points, to switch the coil on and off, enabling even less current at the points, and then pointless (!, better 'breakerless') ignition came in, and kits like the "Magnetronic" (also Lumention, Optronics etc) appeared that allowed previous types to be upgraded. All in the search for longer points life and less dwell variability. So care when mix'n'matching coils and modified ignition modules. The ballast, either in a wire or a resistor was a stop-gap, and can be (should be?) removed, as better and more reliable ignition is available for our cars. John
  3. JohnD

    H beam rods

    Mike, You started this thread telling us that you didn't want to "have to mangle my sump". Now, you have beaten such a big dent in the floor that it fouls the steering rack and warped the sump!!!!!!!!!!!! And then you heated it red hot with a gas axe, which made it worse until you heated it again. Yes, work embrittlement is real, but on thin panels, you heat the bulge after creating it and before making it bigger, to anneal the metal. Only the area worked needs to be heated, in this case about four square centimeters. See: http://www.efunda.com/processes/heat_treat/softening/annealing.cfm Mike, engineering is a light, delicate pastime, suitable for ladies. What you have been doing is a blacksmith's job, or rather what a blacksmith's apprentice might do! John PS "three new bulges in the pan"??? There are only two conrods that can foul it. Where do the other come from.
  4. It is so worth repeating, so thank you Mike for telling your sad tale. I wonder, if the TSSC has any weight with the dealers, they should be asking them to stop selling this engine destroyer. Anyone keen enough to build an engine properly to take an external supply will be able to source and fit the parts themselves, and those who are not should be protected from themselves. I've just checked and the TSSC Shop sells no engine parts at all, so no skin of the Club's nose. For the next AGM, perhaps? John
  5. Throw it in the bin. Get an electric pump. Facet Solid state, £20: http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/320918157381?adgroupid=13585920426&hlpht=true&hlpv=2&rlsatarget=kwd-123671529666&adtype=pla&ff3=1&lpid=122&poi=&ul_noapp=true&limghlpsr=true&ff19=0&device=c&chn=ps&campaignid=207297426&crdt=0&ff12=67&ff11=ICEP3.0.0-L&ff14=122&viphx=1&ops=true&ff13=80 Flows 32 gallons/hour, more than enough for a GT6. John PS an inertia switch in the circuit is a good idea. This pattern is used by Jaguar, Peugeot, Renault, Land Rover, ASston Martin (!), Honda, Alfa Romeo, Uncletomcarmanufacturer n' all, so it's got to be reliable. And cheap - second hand less than £10, but make sure you get the wiring connector plug as well, or else it's difficult to wire in. http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Peugeot-306-Inertia-Fuel-Pump-Cut-Off-Switch-97-02-/272011185402?hash=item3f55214cfa
  6. JohnD

    H beam rods

    "Seams"? What seams? The sump is pressed steel from a single sheet. No seams. Just for anyone else who wants to relieve a 2L sump to provide clearance for a 2.5 crank. no "blow torch" is required, and IMHO potentially damaging to the sump, by warping it. Mark the areas that need to be dented, below 1 and 2 cylinders and with a ball peen hammer (see above) make a small, elongated dimple about an 40 x 5mm and 5mm deep. Do not indent the area between the two dimples, or you will foul the steering rack. The 'frog' in a brick makes a good anvil. John
  7. See: http://www.club.triumph.org.uk/prefix1.htm#Vitesse What "goodies"? Carillo rods? Basicly they are the same. John
  8. Sorry, I can't remember! I gave up using a thermostat,as being unnecessary for a race engine. JOhn
  9. You seem to have it orientated as in the diagram, but which line at the filter adapter is "OUT"? And while you have nice, swaged-end hoses, you seem to have cut them in the middle to fit the thermostat. Use VERY good compression clips. Go for some T-bolt clamps. Be careful! When I first fitted an oil cooler, I got the connections the wrong way around. No probs, the oil circulated anyway, but once the engine warmed up, the 'stat closed as it was intended, but closed off completely. No oil pressure, a small bang and a road covered in oil. JOhn
  10. If you can make someone a member who didn't own a Triumph. That wasn't Lennon's car - it belonged to George Martin, their producer, at the time of JL passing his driving test at the age of 24 (!). Sorry, guys (I nearly said " 'n'gals" but that's Non-PC these days). Lennon's first car was a Ferrari, a 330 GT2+2 Coupe. Like you would if you were one of the richest 24 year olds in the world, even then. John
  11. But SHAZAM!!!!!!!!!!!! I was right! I thang yew! John
  12. Thanks, Iain! Trying to avoid having to draw my own circuit diagram, here is one off the Net, of "Transistor Assisted Contacts" ignition. Think, when I speak of horses Lumenition that there is the optical breaker where the points are. And correct my thinking: The ballast resistor is between the CB points and earth, while the coil and switching transistor 'sees' the full 12V. This reduces the stress and wear on the points. So would the ballast be in the circuit to the coil AND points if, originally, the car had a ballasted ignition and a Low resistance, 6V coil? In that case, should our OP make very sure that, having changed from a low resistance coil and ballast to non-ballast and high resistance,12V coil, he hasn't left so additional ballasting resistance in the system? That would reduce the volts to the coil and make for poor running. Trying to get my head around this! John
  13. Billus, The splines are for the clutch driven plate. You should be able to get one for that spline. The shaft in front of the splines, the spigot, is to go in the bronze bush in the centre of the flywheel. You would need to ensure that you have the right diameter bush and that it and the counter bore it sits in is the right depth. Very important as it supports the forward end of the input shaft! You need to ensure that the wiring is compatible with a J-type, and if your Vitesse didn't have one then the special mount plate for the OD. Some ODs didn't need a relay, I seem to remember. The D-type does, but the J-type?? John
  14. Hang on - the ballast resistor is for the coil. It does not affect the volts to the ignition control unit, or the power transistor, which is designed to run at battery volts, and would have been switching the same volts without the ballast. So if it's still getting hot, and hot in your hand is too hot for a power transistor, then there is some other fault with the unit. Do you still have the same fault? It's probably a duff unit. John
  15. JohnD

    Oil pump

    Kastner thought it wasn't as good in a number of ways, and his Competition Preparation Manual (Club shop?) describes in detail how to modify it with an extended, curved pickup tube. So you might as well fit a later, angled one. John
  16. With the ballast resistor, the coil is now getting ?9V as it should. Your Lumenition should be getting the full 12V, and switching that, so some heat might be expected, from a power transistor. But they loose efficiency if they get hotter than about 25C, so if it's hot in your hand it probably has over cooked. Are you still getting the same fault? John
  17. A Sunday driver, an old guy (=older than me) taking a left corner (for him) on the wrong side of the road. Yes, I was fine, save for a sore knee. John
  18. Richard, When asbestos is a Public Health risk no one can claim that using asbestos pads is a "personal choice", any more than is smoking in public. And when perfectly good brake materials are available that offer as good stopping as any asbestos material, to use those is perverse. I use Mintex 1155 on my road/race car and I've never been less than completely satisfied with their abilities, in fact I pride myself on getting advantage in competition by late braking. There is no place for asbestos brake materials today, and no excuse for using them. John
  19. I agree, Colin! Reminds me of the end of Old Blue Vitesse. But what's that thing on top of the engine, like an overweight dumb bell? And so what if an insurer 'writes off' your car? You buy it back (cost me 12% of the refund) and rebuild it. John
  20. One Jubilee clip can only make vibration worse, as the screw mechanism will be much heavier than the mass that is causing the imbalance. First, check the front and rear flanges. Each has four bolt holes, in two pairs, unequally distributed around the rim, so that the input and output flange pairs, front and back, can only be connected in two ways, not four if all the holes were symmetrical. Thus, there are only four ways that the whole shaft can be bolted up. One way is perfect, one gives dreadful vibration and the other two are so-so. Carefully mark the flanges, so that you can undo them and reassemble each in the two possible ways and then try all four. Then return to the Jubilee clip, or clips, as you should fit TWO, with the screws diametrically opposite, so that they will have no effect on balance. Then move one slightly and note the improvement, or not. If it doesn't move it the other way. If it does, continue to move it in the same direction until the vibration worsens again. Again careful and detailed marking and notes will keep you organised. Finally, or perhaps first as it is easiest, rear end on axle stand, start the engine and observe. NOT from under the car! Do the wheels spin straight? Is any vibration evident? Repeat with wheels off to exclude wheel wobble. You cannot complain about the first two options as they offer endless hours of essential test driving in your Triumph! Good luck John
  21. Do you still have points ignition? Consider using an optical, contact breaker-less ignition system. Lumenition have absorbed several previously independent brands See: http://www.rimmerbros.co.uk/Item--i-GRID006400 John
  22. frenchspit, Bienvenue! Welcome! That particular repair is tricky. It is needed because the rain channel is spot welded on, and not well sealed to the screen surround. Water gets between the channel and the surround and rots. To repair, the channel must be removed, new metal welded into the surround (so screen out) and the channel replaced, if you must - it's not very functional. So delicate, skilled work that costs, unless you can do it yourself. Above, good advice/ideas, to which I'd add, buy a copy of the Haynes book "Guide to Purchase & DiY Restoration" for the whole 'small-chassis' Triumph range. Excellent book that includes (or does in my edition) a chapter on the usual faults, together with an estimate of repair/restoration costs expressed in 'tyres' to make it inflation proof! Very useful when negotiating the price! Bon chance! John
  23. Colin, My apologies. I failed to indicate that my comments on asbestosis were for anyone who advocated using NOS asbestos brake pads, taking precautions to protect yourself when today the problem is more a public health one. Peaks, As I said, mesothelioma is exclusively related to asbestos exposure, and it still occurs, presumably to asbestos in the environment, but it is very difficult to pinpoint the exposure as it can occur many years later. Roy Castle died of a lung cancer exclusively associated with smoking but was a life-long non-smoker and anti-smoking activist, because of other people's smoke - we shouldn't risk other people by using banned brake discs. John
  24. What WAS this guy drinking? Nhoj (Not John, oh, no, I was the other end of the house when this was posted)
  25. Was this EBC advice? Confirms my opinion about them. On exposure to asbestos: Two diseases can result, asbestosis that eventually kills you as your lungs get too stiff to work and mesothelioma, a cancer of the outer lining of the lung. Both take a long time to develop, the cancer 40+ years after exposure, but then kills you very quickly. Asbestosis can take a long time, during which you wish you were dead. Neither are good ways to die. Asbestos isn't dangerous, unless it can get into the air so you can breath in the very fine fibres, so in buildings where it was used as for instance insulation, it may be sealed in, until it must be removed for repair or demolition. Then it is a big problem, as those very fine fibres take to the air very easily. It was such a health risk to workers that it was banned as described above, but it is also a risk to anybody exposed, and mesotheliomas still occur - they are specific to asbestos exposure, and so it is to the benefit of public health, not just workers that asbestos is not used, and expertly removed when it must be disturbed. That expert care includes sealing the work area, with air locks etc. So encouraging anyone to use asbestos brake pads, whose wear dust will be blown around and breathed in by anyone, old or young, is IRRESPONSIBLE IN THE EXTREME. Yes, you can minimise your own risk by following HSE recommendations when working on your brakes, but then leave a miasma of dangerous dust behind you wherever you travel. We can expect to see mesotheliomas many years into the future, in those who are babies today if people go one using asbestos brake pads. John
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