Everything posted by Patcon
-
71 rear brake shoe anchor
I looked for a part number but couldn't find it. Someone else might be able to find it. I suspect they are available new. I probably have one if you can't source one...
- 1976 280Z Restoration Project
-
sweatys rebuild
Just be careful when you polish around sharp edges and details (door waste crease, door bottom, hood bulge). You can protect them with tape until you get the big areas done
-
sweatys rebuild
Orange peel is another challenge for the DIY painter. We don't normally have the equipment or experience to avoid it. You can run a little more pressure so it atomizes better but you use more material when you do. We also don't tend to have professional level guns that lay down a better finish. The best thing to do is lay down an extra coat or two of clear and wet sand it out.
-
I Need radio chassis zinc chromate plated
I would help if I could, but I don't have my system up and running yet. Have you thought about Contacting Norm at Zeddsaver. He plated some stuff for me, he was reasonable...
-
Strange Headlight/Foglight Problem 1987 300zx
Loose connection, bad grounds, broker wire? Do you have a meter?
-
Another door panel thread
If it were me I would go fiberglass for the whole repair. I think you're right to use some resin to wet down the board first. I would use resin to make the initial repair to the crack and hold it close with screws or some weight over wax paper as a release sheet. Then back up the repair with some light weight matt. I think HR's recommendation for using the door as a jig is a great idea too. Once the initial repairs are done you can remove it and back it up from the back side if necessary. I get a magazine from Epoxy works and they do all kinds of projects with fiberglass and resin. It should do fine for all the repairs you need to make. At the holes I would thin down the board around the holes for the repair. That makes room for the repair material without too much overbuild. Whenever you patch holes in fiberglass you all ways try to make transition areas for the repair, same principle..
-
sweatys rebuild
You did good! It's hard to do much better than that in a homemade booth. Because you just can't get it clean enough after doing body work. I am sure it will clean up and be perfect after some light polishing
-
Choke Cable replacement
So the stainless would be a really good choice, correct size and no corrosion...
-
77 280 restoration
Very nice. Always nice to make progress
-
New owner of '77 280z from Upstate SC
Glad you made some progress on the car. Hopefully it will start to get sorted out...
-
Choke Cable replacement
Has anyone "miked" the original cables to see what diameter we are shooting for?
- 1976 280Z Restoration Project
- 1976 280Z Restoration Project
- 1976 280Z Restoration Project
-
1976 280Z Restoration Project
Shape the floor pan. It's easy to do. Make a series of cuts in to the floor pan about every 2", closer where a tight radius is needed. Take a heel dolly and round the floor pan to it turn up where needed. Zip screw it in place. Take a body saw or cut off tool and cut the tunnel and floor pan in one pass. Tack it in place and form some more with a heel dolly. weld it all up...
-
1973 Rebuild
Good! They got there. I hope they work great for you... make small welds and let them cool completely or they will warp
- 1976 280Z Restoration Project
-
1976 280Z Restoration Project
Aircraft stripper recommends paint thinner for neutralization. It is very aggressive still. We stripped Cody's 510 hood with it and you could watch the paint release. I cant find the pictures I took. The paint bubbles and releases as you watch it. 3 layers of paint off half the hood in about 10 minutes, done...
-
Leno drives "Fugu Z"
The seats did seem low. Google says Jay Leno is 5-11. I didn't think he was that tall, maybe so. If he is pushing 6 foot and is that low in the car the seats are really low... It did appear that they didn't know some of the history of the car
-
Surging
The way I would define loops, is open loop runs on a program based on throttle position and sensor feedback. Closed loop runs on a program but uses an o2 sensor to modulate fuel. When my suburban is warming up it runs on open loop and surges some. When the truck heats up and switches to closed loop the surging goes away. Zed is probably right, fuel pressure would be a good place to start. If it bounces around the car will surge because the ECU is trying to prevent stalling then it catches, back and forth...If it was mine I would plumb in a fuel gauge in a permanent location. On the fuel rail or somewhere under the hood...
-
Leno drives "Fugu Z"
The car sounds great. I am not sure I would have given up the 100hp to go NA. I like the body kit for a restomod too...
- Surging
-
sweatys rebuild
I have a plastic paint booth sort of like you have with a fan and filter set up so bugs aren't normally a problem. I don't want to paint the car in pieces because I have been told the shading may not be right if I don't lay down the same amount of paint on all the panels. Since I don't paint a lot I have a better shot at painting the car assembled so the variations from panel to panel are minimized. So the car will be 90% complete when I spray the outside...
- 1976 280Z Restoration Project