Everything posted by Namerow
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Thinking about installing an BMW M6 engine in my Z
Not 'complete garbage'. Rather, 'failed experiment'! Nice looking wheels, by the way.
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240z Carpet Thread (Yuk Yuk)
I'm confused, Blue. You start off by mentioning '240z Canadian Jan 1971' and ' date codes in the car are Dec-Jan 70/71', but then you say, 'there is no split in the back deck carpet as the 01/1970 had the plastic storage bins behind the seats'. And then the pix that follow right afterwards are labeled, "240Z Jan 1971" but they show a back deck carpet with no split. Would I be correct in saying that your first set of photos are mislabeled and should, in fact, say: '240Z Jan 1970', while the text preamble should say, '240z Canadian Jan 1970' and 'date codes in the car are Dec-Jan 69/70' ? Also, I have a question (for you, or for others) that the photos don't directly address: Did all of the early cars (i.e. cars with the plastic storage bins behind the seats) use the rubber underlay sheet in the back deck area in place of the jute pad underlay that appeared at some later point? Let me put that another way, so you'll see what I'm getting at: Did the jute pad underlay in the back deck area arrive in conjunction with the relocation of the storage areas from behind the seats to underneath the deck floor, or did the jute replace the rubber underlay at some point while the storage areas were still located behind the seats? My car is a 5/70 and was purchased with both carpet and underlay missing from the hatch and the front floor areas, so I need to figure out what should go in those locations.
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650 miles Roadtrip on some of Norways most spectacular roads
A giant, chrome moose! Never saw anything like that before. Must be spectacular at night under the lights.
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My two swiss S30Z Fairlady Restoration build thread
Very useful to see how this panel was designed, esp. the joins at the lower rocker/sill and the hatch sill, as well as the inner panel that joins to the hatch floor. Too bad no one offers these as a re-pop. Nice find!
- Anyone know this wheel?
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Parts from my 1970 240z
Not in the market at present, but curious: Do you know who is the manufacturer of that strut brace ?
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Replacement Inner Rocker Panels
A 'Dogleg Rebuild Panels Kit' might be a winner. Not all these cars need the full inner rocker/sill panel treatment, but the majority seem to have rot in the dogleg. And, as Chris points out, that's a multi-layer construction and not easy to figure out for someone faced with doing it the first time. If the car's owner is hoping to end up with a $15K - $20K car at the end of his/her restoration or refresh project, I would expect that laying out 2 x $300 for a LHS/RHS dogleg panel kit would be a justifiable outlay. Of course, your pricing would need to make sense relative to what Tabco, Zeddfindings and others ask for their types of panels.
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Replacement Inner Rocker Panels
Very impressive metal-forming work, esp. considering the gauge and CR material. Price seems more than reasonable, considering the hours I expect you put into fabricating a pair. For a Z with rot in the dogleg area, the chance to put fresh, heavy-gauge sheet metal into the area where the safety belt mounts might be worth the price of admission all on its own.
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Observations on Wiper motor connectors.
I bought connectors and tools (crimper, terminal removers) from Vintage Connections last year. Good stuff, and a good vendor (easy ordering process, good packaging, fast turnaround). Recommended. Worth noting that removing the connector shells makes it a lot easier to install a new firewall dustboot on the engine compartment wiring harness. While others have said that it`s possible to coax the dustboot over the connectors (with heat, maybe?), I'm not sure I'd want to risk tearing the boot to try that.
- Locking Gas Cap Solution for S30 that works
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My New Diff Mount and Strap Project
Question for CO: How did you do the stitching? By hand? Household sewing machine? Jobbed out to your local shoe repair shop?
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Caswell Plating
As promised, here are some pix and comments about my plating set-up... Electrolyte Bath Although a 3-gallon set-up would be great, that was going to push the cost of the Caswell 'Part A' and 'Part B' chemicals pretty high, so I opted for the 1.5-gallon set-up instead. That meant doing some head-scratching about bucket sizes and shapes, so as to get the most out of the fixed, 1.5-gallon fluid volume. I looked at three possibilities: 5-gallon pail, 2-gallon bucket, and std-issue dishwashing bowl. I filled each with 1.5 gallons of water and then measured the resulting depth. The floating bottle caps give you an idea of the results. While the 5-gallon pail gives a couple of extra inches in diameter, it also produces a relatively shallow bath depth. In the end, Mr. Happyface won. It gives me a bath depth of about 9" and a diameter of about 10". The dishwashing bowl is what I propose to use for plating bigger parts (haven't tried it out yet). Note: I cleaned all of the bowls in advance (wiped down with alcohol) to make sure there was no parting compound or other manufacturing residue on the inner surfaces. The Caswell electrolyte chemicals consist of a bag of lumpy power and a jar of liquid. They need to be pre-mixed, after which you add 1.5 gallons of (distilled) water. I used the 5-gallon bucket to do the mixing. The Caswell 'Part A' powder also contains a lot of big white chunks of stuff (metal salts?). The chunks eventually dissolves, but not right off the bat. Before adding the Caswell 'B' liquid to the Caswell 'A' powder, I broke down all of the powder lumps (not to be confused with the chunky stuff) and picked out a few suspicious-looking bits of small stuff that didn't look like they belonged. After adding the 'B' liquid, I used a (clean) spoon to mix the two together (creates a watery paste) and then I added the distilled water. I mixed the water in thoroughly, using a paint mixing attachment (pre-cleaned with alcohol) in my cordless drill. The result is a kind semi-opaque, brownish liquid (which eventually turns clear). I did all this mixing on a Saturday evening and just put the lid on the bucket before calling it a day. Not sure whether the white chunks had fully dissolved at that point, but when I came back to the job the next day, the mixture had turned clear brown and there was nothing at the bottom other than a bit of undissolved debris... I poured the liquid into another (clean) 5-gallon bucket, using a coffee filter to get rid of the debris. Then I poured the filtered liquid into Mr. Happyface. More details and pix tomorrow.
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Caswell Plating
Well, third time's a charm, it seems. After two lengthy and unsuccessful adventures with a DIY electrolyte set-up, I finally spent the money and bought the Caswell chemicals. It took me almost full day to create a new set-up... I created all-new baths (distilled water, muriatic acid, MEK solvent, Caswell electrolyte, Caswell blue chromate & Caswell yellow chromate). Every container was wiped down with alcohol before use, to make sure and manufacturing residue, fingerprints, etc. were gone. I also replaced my wire wheel (brass) with a new one, just in case the old one had acquired any kind of contamination. The acid bath was mixed at 1 part acid to 4 parts distilled water Electrolye and chromate baths were created according to the directions on the Caswell packaging (I didn't buy their manual).and added new ones for the electrolyte and the two phosphates) I used a fresh, single hoop of Moss-Boss zinc foil I added 1/2 teaspoon of Caswell's brightener liquid before getting started No heating used for the acid bath, nor for the two chromate dips My detergent bath consisted of a 4-qt crock pot full of distilled water, to which I added 400ml of liquid ammonia and a shot of dish detergent. I kept this at about 100 degrees F. Parts were scrubbed with a toothbrush, then rinsed off in a distilled water bath. The electrolyte bath was kept heated at between 100 - 110 degrees F during plating, with constant agitation using an aquarium bubbler. I pre-heat the solution with a hot water tank heating element, then remove the heater before I start plating. I started at 110 degrees. The temp dropped to about 100 degrees over the plating period. Plating current was set based on 140mA per sq.in. of part surface. I ran the part for 20 minutes, turning it 90 degrees at the 10-minute mark. I wasn't actually ready to get started with my first part (a brake line clip from the engine compartment) until about 3:00 Sunday afternoon. The part looked good coming out of the zinc plating step -- full coverage, dull light grey, no burning, no visible edge or corner effects. It got a quick swish in a distilled water bath, then into the blue chromate for a 60 s. dip. After that, it went directly (no rinse) into the yellow chromate dip for a 15s dip. Then a quick rinse with tap water. Then a 1 min. blast with a blow drier (running on HI heat). I can't tell you what a relief it was to see the part emerge like this... I'll post some pictures of my set-up later, along with some additional comments about settings and running multiple parts. I haven't tried any large items yet, so that remains an unknown.
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Body Emblem Clips
Thanks, Casey. In the intervening time since I made this post, I've made a couple of important discoveries: I am an idiot. The trim badges (which I already have) come with the barrel clips already installed on the mounting posts. In my defense, they're tiny and easy to miss. There's a (relatively) convenient source for these clips from on online jobber who has an eBay store... Gulf Coast Auto Parts LLC Bag of 25 clips for $9.95 (that's more like it!) Shipping free in the USA (or add $15 for Canadian orders). http://www.ebay.com/itm/Barrel-Nuts-For-Nissan-Qty-25-1-8-Stud-5-32-Hole-Trim-Emblem-Molding-018-/322144534004?hash=item4b014f7df4:g:81wAAOSwuhhXWest&vxp=mtr Lots of other items available from this supplier. Great fun if you're a fastener geek.
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Body Emblem Clips
When I bought my Z from the PO, the body had been repainted and all of the small press-in clips used to secure the trim badges had been removed and lost. Now that I get around to replacing them, I find that I need 20 of them and they cost $2.50 each. That's $50 for a bagful of clips that I would have expected to be worth five bucks max (ok, maybe ten). Has anyone located a non-Nissan source, or a parts-store substitute, for these pieces? In Nissan parlance, these are: 'Clips - Tublar' (tubular) with the part number, 63845-18000 . In the non-Nissan world, I believe these are called 'trim barrel nuts'. Everybody used to use them back in the day. I think these are what the Nissan clips look like...
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sweatys rebuild
This is an impressive build. Great attention to detail. I like the fact that you're willing to divert from the conventional aesthetics here and there (e.g. black fasteners) to get the look you like. I didn't track back through the entire thread to pick up on the details, but I believe there was discussion of electrical tape. May I suggest that you have a look at using automotive 'loom' tape (no adhesive), rather than the non-automotive. Maybe not so important for the under-dash wiring (where covering the wiring runs with tape is probably optional), but a real consideration for the engine compartment, where engine heat can cause the tape adhesive to weep out of the wrap, creating a dirt magnet that will defy easy clean-up. I used loom tape to re-wrap my engine compartment harness (pretty much all of it, by the time the job was finished) and was really pleased with the results. There are some tricks to working with this material but, with a bit of practice, you should be able to complete the job in a morning or an afternoon. A $25 roll should be enough for the front part of the car. If you're interested, I'll post some hints on how to do the wrap.
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My New Diff Mount and Strap Project
Well, I meant electrical, of course. Chemical engineers just play with reactions and stuff. Nothing useful.
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Wanted: Carpets or Rubber Floor Mats for 1969 240z
IIRC, there was a vendor in Victoria, BC who offered Brit-style jute by the yard. Knowing the Brti car community on the lower Island, I don't think they'd tolerate anything that wasn't absolutely 'pucka'. Maybe worth investigating. Alternatively, just 'go to the well': Britain. That was Nissan's inspiration for a lot of things in the early days ('My Fair Lady')..
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My New Diff Mount and Strap Project
OK, this -- along with the socket-head cap bolts substitute -- wins my vote for, 'best improvised maintenance fix of the year'. If you'd been a Nissan Service employee when these cars were in production, CO, they probably would have given you an award! Who said chemical engineers can't think outside the box?
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Thinking about installing an BMW M6 engine in my Z
It's been done, and documented with photos... somewhere (where?) on this site . Is that strands of fibreglass I see across a hole at the bottom of the A-pillar? Yikes!
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Wanted: Carpets or Rubber Floor Mats for 1969 240z
There was a good discussion here recently about sources for authentic jute (The Roadster Factory... http://trf.zeni.net/webcatalog/specials9.35/38.php?s_wt=1680&s_ht=1050 ) and OE-matching early-style carpets. Can't remember the carpet mftr's name (I think it was brought up by Jim Arnett). Do a search on 'Careless'.
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Float level advice, please.
According to my notes, these were the changes to the carbs that occurred as of Jan. 71 production and the emergence of the so-called Series 2 cars... Different, front vs. rear… Front = long-ear, long-needle; Rear = short-ear, short-needle. Drain fittings added. 3 screws for float bowl covers. (S1 carbs used 4-screw float bowl lids, with long-ear / long-needle for both front and rear. Bowls did not have drain fittings.) For the 72 that I no longer have, the carb re-build kits that I bought had entirely different part no's.
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Removal of mileage reset cable
I found Eastwood's 'DuraBlock' sanding blocks to be just about ideal for the contouring of my S30 dash. The big, teardrop-shaped block got the most use. Perfect for the big-radius valleys between the gauge pod humps. IIRC, I had to use a small length of heater hose as a block for certain areas (inside lips of the small gauge pods, maybe). I had the same problem with the bumper repair compound (I used 'Bumper-Bite'). I recall having only about 45 seconds available per mix before it began to set and could no longer be shaped or smoothed. Even cutting the ratio of hardener-to-base down to 1:10 had no effect -- the stuff just seemed to be ultra-sensitive to the hardener catalyst. I only used it to finish off my localized repaired areas. I can't imagine trying to use it to cover the entire dash surface!
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Thinking about installing an BMW M6 engine in my Z
As one of the PO's of this car, all I can say is that I didn't know about these specific rust areas... but I suspected there'd be stuff like this lurking under all that undercoating. Anyway, Grannyknot is an artist with a MIG welder, so this should be quite fix-able. Chris: PM sent
- Tank:1 Z:0