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Josef

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Everything posted by Josef

  1. It goes on the hood header rail, rivets through the channel, hood fabric then the frame itself. Do you have the early (Herald style) or late (square tail style) hood catches? I imagine the former if you were looking for a continuous seal channel? I’ll post a photo of mine later when I can get out in the garage.
  2. You’ll really wonder that when you’ve got a couple more Totally not speaking from experience…
  3. Royal blue mk3s are the best kind of Spitfire, I might be slightly biased though
  4. The seam cover should be DIY-able (two strips of steel, tack either side of the seam, weld the corner, careful grinding / dressing). Don’t expect you'd be able to salvage that part from a donor. How bad is the roof? Worth asking the usual suspect breakers (Spitfire Graveyard, Spitbitz) for a donor, even if they’ve only got a section less bad than yours it might help.
  5. I’ve wondered about trying something like this https://cjautosheywood.co.uk/product/visbella-leather-repair-kit-c117/ on my Herald dash. Not got round to it, and in some ways I like the little nicks as they’re part of the history. Anyway, at £11 ish and a bit of time I’d think it worth a go.
  6. It was earlier. My Dec 69 built DHC has no flags, or filled holes in the wings!
  7. Yeah as Johny says the arm on the gearshift mechanism is bent. Straightening both the piece parallel to the gearshift and the bit perpendicular to it should bring you in to contact with the switch. They really don’t need much to actuate.
  8. Another thing to keep in mind is that the a-posts can also splay outwards. I had, in addition to jacks under the floor, a post and b post, a ratchet strap between the a posts. Less likely to be a problem on the GT6, but @Richard Baines definitely something to watch out for on the Spitfire, as well as making sure your door glass and windscreen frame will fit relative to one another. Dropped a posts can result in the window not closing cause the screen ends up tilted back!
  9. Have you got an FD prefix engine number? It should make 75BHP in standard tune, and it’s a nice revvy engine, mine certainly feels fast! Would be worth checking the carbs, dizzy etc for wear, and perhaps measuring the cam lift to make sure it does have the expected Mk3 cam fitted. Plus a good tune up, best thing I’ve ever learned for making the engine more performant is doing the timing by feel and road test!
  10. Four of course, then you’ve got one whole light Glad to see the door skins are looking like good pressings. I had a bad one… They all come from the same place, and the supplier was very reluctant to accept that one could possibly be wrong, despite photographs showing this was the case. Luckily Mick Dolphin had a NOS one which solved the problem for me (and I got a refund on the original eventually) but I was concerned that this was another thing we were only getting in crappy quality. With the sills, even NOS Stanpart ones, be aware that they may also require some modifications to fit, so don’t topcoat them immediately! I was surprised there, but it’s the old 50 year old wonky body wonky chassis problem. For anyone looking for sills the modern repros looked pretty comparable to the NOS one I had: Adjusting the Sills to Fit - NOS Versus New | 1970 Triumph Herald 13/60 | Part 15 https://youtu.be/1is9d95_ZvY
  11. Well I know everyone here would be thrilled to see the estate on the road again (for you and the car!) even if we might not see it in person. I’ve used Safety Belt Services of Bedford before, they were slightly more expensive than Quickfit, but the latter gave me over the phone without VAT and didn’t indicate that this was the case at all… So the difference in the end wasn’t huge.
  12. For reference my Herald engine rebuild has just cost about £1.75k in parts and engineering work (well, still not managed to start it yet so hopefully we can stop at that figure!) That includes a Distributor Doctor dizzy rebuild which was not cheap, but hopefully worthwhile.
  13. Those gaps are looking pretty good! Yep you’ll need to add to the lip on the edge of the floor, the sills also need to be fitted slightly under tension though (you push up slightly on the lower edges) so take that in to account too when adding your floor lip.
  14. Oh dear, giving me flashbacks here this is all looking very familiar. You’ll get there though! I managed to do so from an even less experienced position than you’re in.
  15. Oh, yes. Didn’t know that came separately. Never mind then!
  16. Yeah if you’ve got it that far apart you’ll be able to make it fit. At this point if it looks right, it is right! You can only buy the whole b-post striker / transition panel, so I’d just make up bits to do a neater job than you’ve inherited. What you have is similar to how my driver’s side had been treated and that was an easy enough repair when I had a few months fabrication experience and pretty much no proper tools. (Even if you did buy and cut up the panel, you’d almost certainly find yourself modifying the area in question anyway.) Look forward to seeing how it progresses.
  17. Oh dear. Been there, done that. Mine was worse though! Rimmer’s are fine, but they’re almost always the most expensive option. I’d buy the ‘genuine’ sills (British Motor Heritage) from Canley Classics, James Paddock or similar. I’ve had one of these next to a Rover branded one from the 90s and they’re the same beyond some visible wear in the tooling. Still expect to have to cut it up a bit to get everything looking right though. You may want/need to adjust the fit of the rear wing where it meets the sill too as the root cause of your door stick out may well be that area being too far inboard. Aaaaand, if you find you need to make any repairs to the b post section in the door shut, don’t buy that panel, it’s junk, the pressing for the striker is too shallow so you’ll not be able to shut the door, also been there and also done that… (Doesn’t look like you’d need to go that far, but I wanted to get that warning in just in case!)
  18. If you can find out what shims your diff rebuilder is stuck on, try Mike Papworth who might be able to point you in the right direction, and always worth perusing Mick Dolphin’s catalogue for stuff you think you’ll never be able to find. If shipping to Germany is proving the awkward thing, then feel free to PM me and I’d be happy to act as an intermediary.
  19. I’d be inclined to agree that you should not weld up the bonnet till you’ve got the rest of the body ready to check it against. Looking good though! Skinning doors is relatively easy compared with some other bodywork jobs! If you’re using one of the skinning tools you just need to be aware that you can push it in to the face of the skin if you’re not careful with how it’s aligned. Also, check your skins carefully when you get them. The modern one I bought (Fitchett’s via the club shop) was not straight along the top, and the body line was not pressed all the way along the door…
  20. All b post related repair sections I bought when working on my Spitfire were poor in various ways… If you post a photo of exactly which bit you’re talking about I can probably give you some suggestions about making a section yourself.
  21. I used some closed cell foam as a seal between the tank drain and corresponding hole in the floor, so sounds close to what you’re suggesting Pete H.
  22. I had one from Dave at the Spitfire Graveyard a few years back, so it’d be worth giving him a call.
  23. Well, some part of the lack of resto posts is related to the club’s changes to photo hosting allowances… Part of my reasoning for starting posting more to YouTube than my threads on here though is that the cars will then have a chance of reaching a slightly wider audience, and perhaps show more people that home restoration is a viable thing.
  24. I’d take an easier to remove switch, say the main light switch, off and see how it fits the new dash.
  25. Josef

    Compression test

    Well your highest vs lowest readings are 10% separated, as Pete said above you’re looking for a max of roughly 5%. Do you get consistent readings though? If you’re not familiar with the process I’d do three readings per cylinder. If you get consistent readings per cylinder you can be confident of the reproducibility of your method and therefore confident that you’re seeing a real difference between cylinders.
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