Jump to content
We Need Your Help! ×

IGNORED

1973 Rebuild


Recommended Posts


I was sitting and contemplating my parking brake situation, and it occurred to me that it may be possible to change the ends of the cables to connect to the maxima calipers properly.

The Maxima had cylindrical ball ends on the cables rather than the clevises the 240z has, similar to these:

C5C699D7-E6EF-4836-8877-FA1E8A6A576F.jpeg


When I have a chance I’ll measure and see what would fit. I’m looking around now to see if there are kits to replace these, but I could probably make them out of steel rod. It’s just a question of making them stay on. Maybe welding them would work if I can’t find a reliable clamping mechanism that can be done at home.

I also found a couple of places that make parking brake cables, so I am looking into that as well.

Edited by Matthew Abate
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 10 months later...

Okay, new tactic: anyone know where I could get a fresh set of these that haven’t been swayed yet?

 

189B04AA-B6DF-4635-8A49-6EAE18286DC9.jpeg
 

Im looking into having a set made by a machinist, but buying them from the people that make the zcardepot parking brake would be better.

Edited by Matthew Abate
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

Well, I thought I’d be smart ad clean up my steering shaft with a wire wheel, but I wasn’t thinking about what I was doing and I hit the rubber seals on my perfectly good universal joint and ripped them off. Now I have a problem.

I know you can get a u-joint from a Land Rover that fits in these staked shafts from later 240zs, but it’s the restaking that is the issue. I can’t find a machine shop willing to do anything with a staked u-joint, including removing them.

Edited by Matthew Abate
Link to comment
Share on other sites

FF4F586D-FE80-4A23-9859-E204E5DC81FC.jpeg

Started cleaning up that steering shaft.

A414ADC6-1F9F-464E-B757-5A174F1EEB27.jpeg

The first bit was easy, but I didn’t cut enough of the staking off the last cap and I ended up punching through it.

9ADC6F90-8810-4BD1-985B-3B0487B16F9F.jpeg

It took 11 times as long to do the last one as it took for the first three.

BCCD4D1D-A8BE-4E7C-8107-F87CAD13B325.jpeg

I wanted to be very careful to not ruin anything, so it was a very delicate process of tapping various punches with the brass hammer.

B9CE6D9E-12EF-4079-B354-ED7B51C76B6F.jpeg

In the end I got it apart. Now I just have to wait for the new u-joint.

23B7F424-216E-42AC-AF43-52089F9883EE.jpeg

Next step is that wire wheel again, followed by paint. This was black originally, but I’m thinking of going with silver for the respray

Edited by Matthew Abate
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

45 minutes ago, siteunseen said:

How's your engine build? I remember reading about the very meticulous guy's comments and wondered if he finished it up for you. I think he buillt aerial motors? 

Can't wait to see the finished car. I've been keeping up.

Yeah, my dad is doing it for me. He’s close. We ran into some issues with the machinist we went to and our head all needing different problems solved, but we are on track to be done real soon. Soon enough that I need to get the transmission sorted for when the engine shows up.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Speaking of the transmission, I took some photos of my 1980 720 5-speed:

DFF836F3-38C3-4206-9096-BA8228658892.jpeg

AE85805F-F80F-4997-BF12-E931CB92FEEE.jpeg

CEFF7F55-FCD8-48AD-AE8D-E717A396E280.jpeg

01FF1FD8-BE3C-44D7-BE0A-8CD3B3953C91.jpeg

And the case markings:

3B616D24-8601-4C8E-A1A8-3665FB65F63E.jpeg

A079F67A-52F4-4FCD-ABD4-4B291B047FA0.jpeg

910E6CCF-6806-4E26-9DCE-E25D49DF4333.jpeg

The #1 indicates the following gear ratios should be in this case:

1    3.592
2    2.246
3    1.415
4    1.000
5    0.813

Same as the stock 4-speed plus an overdrive. Should offset my 3.9 LSD rear end for cruising.

Edited by Matthew Abate
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Okay, back to steering…

All my original parts are clean and ready for paint. The Land Rover universal joint arrived last night, and new hardware is on its way.

35F1F262-9E17-4F11-A267-CC531F9E0FDF.jpeg

The next step is to mic the LR u-joint and make sure it’s a match. Then I’ll paint the shaft parts and get them ready to go back together.

The u-joint is from FEBEST, which I have never heard of. Hopefully it’s not garbage. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ At least this isn’t going to spin a whole lot…

1C532C72-BEF6-4AC4-8D5C-49508C1E8263.jpeg

FFBA5E91-73AE-44CE-B293-6A5A6B9866BF.jpeg

Getting the old u-joint out was fun. Since I blew through the top of one of the caps I spent 4 hours and a million different tools to delicately get the remainder out. I dressed the inside of the yokes and got it pretty enough for reassembly. They’re a little bit ugly but not where it matters. I still need to mic them, but I am reasonably certain that I did not open up the holes and ruin the friction fitting.

29EC63A6-A9AE-40F8-9988-B2CBF2E0CF58.jpeg

Edited by Matthew Abate
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Who's Online   1 Member, 0 Anonymous, 567 Guests (See full list)

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Guidelines. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.