The Route
For this year the 2013 route has been enhanced with a route that drives into the most adventurous region of Mongolia, the stunningly beautiful northern sector. We will cross into Russia and on to the Republic of Belarus with the support of the Russian motor-federation who worked with us in seeking out long gravel farm-land sections for our Time Trials and drive an exciting new route across Europe with closed-road mountain climbs in the Alps. Highly acclaimed in 2013 the challenge for the Organisation is make Peking Paris 2016 even better.
The Cars
The cars are divided into two age categories.... either in the Vintageant category for pre 1941 model types or the Classic category for models of a type in production before 1975. The route includes driving some of the worlds toughest terrain with participants required to maintain a demanding rally time-schedule. Small cars carrying much the same weight as bigger cars will be at a distinct disadvantage. To qualify for a place on Peking to Paris 2016, a car can certainly be "different" but must reasonably stand a chance of coping with the demands of the event. Sports cars with cramped interior space, minimal ground clearance and little suspension movement are less than ideal, but the Organisation tries to be broad-minded. Tents, sleeping bags, and all spare parts including wheels must be carried by each entrant. The ERA's travelling support mechanics are the best in the business at roadside repairs but they do not carry parts for the participants.
The Classics Category does not allow trucks, pick-up trucks, ambulances, estate-cars, or what is generally regarded to be a commercial-vehicle, such as a van. This is a sporting event. Carrying heavy spares and kit is not in the spirit of the challenge. While it is perfectly acceptable for one car with a crew who wishes to be competitive can enter a second car to provide general support, we do not wish to see spare engines, gearboxes, axles in "mules" for a lighter car that is out to win a trophy.
Cars must be prepared in a period-style. No alloy-boxes on the back, no modern-looking ski-boxes or roof-top boxes. Appearance matters. Ratchet straps come in black and are preferable to bright blue, but leather straps do the job just as well and are more in keeping with the spirit of the event.... the devil is the detail, and bright green jackets when a more period colour is available is preferable, and certainly pleases the film makers and photographers. Crews must remember! Prince Borghese is looking down!
Cars should be prepared with high ground clearance and be capable of running on low grade petrol. A compression ratio any higher than 8:1 can lead to piston failure.... this has happened to cars on our earlier events. Substantial underbody protection with a sump guard, tank guard, and skid plates to all vulnerable items and ideally brake pipes and petrol lines either well plated or running inside the car is strongly advised.
The Participants
Participants must be prepared to “rough it” on a regular basis. Several days of well supported camping in Mongolia is part of the challenge... the participants bring a tent and the warmest sleeping bag and the ERA does the rest. Camp sites beside rivers and lakes see hot food served each night with a wide ranging menu, hot breakfasts, and toilets are set up with hot-shower blocks, run by two highly experienced Mongolian camp-support teams. Crews should come prepared to share the driving. While there is no night time driving, some of the days are long and require personal stamina and determination.
Read more about this rally at the Endurance Rally Association.
Don't forget to track our own Z car family:
98 David Hartley(GB) / Stephen Hardwick(GB)1971 - Datsun 240Z
103 Rene Declercq(B) / Eric Claeys(B)1972 - Datsun 240Z
104 Chris Bury(USA) / Tjerk Bury(USA)1972 - Datsun 240Z
105 Mark Pickering(AUS) / Dave Boddy(AUS)1973 - Datsun 240Z
106 David Gainer(AUS) / Peter St George(AUS)1972 - Datsun 240Z
We have a discussion about this rally on our website here.
I am trying to figure out what he stopped leaking with teflon tape on the thread. Maybe his cable was still full of oil and slowly leaking back out. The tape stopped that from leaking. He probably didn't clean the cable, while he was doing the seals.
A little bit of trivia: When I ordered the o-rings they quoted two parts numbers for the speedo and striking rod, but when I measured them on a o-ring cone, I came up with the same size. There is a photo of them in the "Leaky transmission" link.
My rubber hat washer is long gone. I think the PO left it out when he installed the close ratio. I cut a ring out of 2mm NBR sheet with some hole punches. Its main purpose is to keep dust, grime and water from getting in. It probably would stop oil leaking if the outer cable was in good condition, but that is not its intended purpose. And like chickman said, only available with a new "genuine" inner cable and the better aftermarket units.
If you go on the eBay website the fee for the sale of the car is $125 if I'm not mistaken. You also have to pay for the ad, and lose a 3% paypal fee on your deposit. There are some ins and outs but that's a rundown.
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Seems like by putting teflon tape there he just redirected whatever oil was leaking to stay in the speedo cable itself.
I picked up some rubber washers today at HomeDepot. (in the plumbing/sink repair section) Believe the one i used was labeled a 1/2" washer, with a 3/4" OD and 3/16" ID. The smaller ID fit very snug, and I believe I have it seated differently than the original grommet.
Here is where my washer sits. I think there is still enough engagement with the spinning gear that it shouldn't be a problem... but we will see. It fit so well at that point, i didn't want to try to force it over the next "hump" There seemed like the spring shaft was compressed enough that the keyway shouldn't pop out... but i suppose if i had popped the washer over that hump it would have helped to hold that in as well.
10k$ center caps. Now there's a "wheeler dealer" for ya.
I might add that I did the same thing once for a nice set of watanabe wheels.
I will add these to my to-look-for-list when shopping. Desperate buyers are always welcome at my store.
I know of two cars for sale around 10k with rims and center caps you could buy take caps and resale.
Or make offer on caps Chattanooga Tennessee craigslist .
Since I'm an originality GEEK, thought I would show the NOS OEM hangars I found when restoring my series 1 car.
Stuff like this is still out there, just takes a lot of patience.
Dan