Everything posted by Patcon
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Fender Flares
I totally understand. These things drag out forever for me between work, cars and life, the simple jobs take ten times longer than they should.
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Fender Flares
I agree with most of what is in that thread but I would go to a good paint shop and get some good body panel 2 part epoxy. I would also use fiberglass to do the initial blending. Rough the body up good with 36 grit paper use fiber glass under the flair and hold them in place with zip screws. The fiberglass will bond if it has enough tooth. Use some light weight woven fiberglass mat over the seam. Then use body filler to properly fair in the flairs. The fiberglass can be used from underneath too if needed to waterproof the joint. Body filler is not water reisistant
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Just thinking RB26 DETT
Well I didn't think Grannyknot aught to be the only one trying to shoe horn unusual hardware into an S30. What about trying to shoe horn a 4 wheel drive RB26 in. Do you think the front could be converted to all wheel drive? What got me thinking this craziness was seeing an engine for sale on Ebay. It has a transfer case with holes for output shafts to the front wheels. I guess you would have to find a vehicle to source front hubs from
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13th Annual GT Awards goes to a 240z
Can't find pricing on the kit. Japanese Nostalgic Car has an article about the kit but no pricing there either. Curious what that would set you back. I may have a candidate here at the house for that kind of treatment
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13th Annual GT Awards goes to a 240z
But did you see the engine in the Grey Dodge ????? 9 litres and 1650 HP
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13th Annual GT Awards goes to a 240z
I am not a big fan of applied fender flairs but if I was going to do it, I like this car better than anything else I've seen.
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Late 72 240z automatic trans
Automatic and it's already at $8,200 and there are no pictures of the problem rust areas and it's in Pennsylvania????
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Hatch Repair
I have several different copy pipes beaten into different shapes. Most are 3/4" with a short piece of wood in the uncrushed end. The wood keeps from having to hold onto the 500dF copper pipe after it warms up. Eastwood sells some premade but they are very easy to DIY
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Upholstery removal from fender wells and struts-78 280 2+2
I agree with Grannyknot, blast first then patch what you find. I have a good blaster here in Spartanburg. I can get you his number if you're interested.
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Redwing's Car - An Update
When your car died did you check the fuel pressure?
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Upholstery removal from fender wells and struts-78 280 2+2
If you need patch panels. I may have some. I am not that far away from you.
- Hatch Repair
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What about a 3.6L Chevy V6 Transplant?
4" is a lot a lot of room to do without. Will be interesting to see what the djwarner comes up with for dimensions off the Camaro
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Hatch Repair
I would probably try to MIG them closed. Then use a die grinder with a cut off wheel to knock the welds down. then use a 90 degree die grinder with a 2" 36 grit rowlock to clean the last up. If you have a piece of 1/2" copper pipe, flatten one end so you can hold it up behind the hole. Weld against the copper backer but remember it will get hot fast. My second choice would be small metal patches and dress them the same way...
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Recommended Car stereo on a 1972 240z
Chuck, Does your JVC keep the proper time? I have had 2 different models of JVC's in the last 18 months where the clock has a mind of it own. Can set it, won't keep time, sets then reverts back 20 minutes a little while later. Found a lot of reviews with the same issue. If you can't make it keep time then I don't know how good it can be. Charles
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Upholstery removal from fender wells and struts-78 280 2+2
If it was leaking in the flat areas of the car, be sure and check the flat bottom areas inside the quarter panels.
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What about a 3.6L Chevy V6 Transplant?
^^^Agreed
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sweatys rebuild
You did good. The carbs and dash are worth 3 times what you paid for the car. Be careful if you work under the car that it can't roll. That would be bad. Blasting may reveal some more rots areas but at least you will have found it all. Looks good
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Redwing's Car - An Update
I am still in the Ignition, ecu, fuel pump park. Jai, Do you have a fuel gauge under the hood currently? If so when it dies do you still have fuel pressure?
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What about a 3.6L Chevy V6 Transplant?
Looking for dimension on the LFX v-6 and came up with this off the LS1 forums http://ls1tech.com/forums/conversions-hybrids/1694935-2013-lfx-v6-camaro-standalone-harness-done.html evidently someone has already made a standalone harness for this engine.... Edit: there are lots of images of the LS-1 on Google that will give you dimensions. If your v-6 is the same or smaller it should fit. Oil pan could be a problem like Grannyknot had though...
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What about a 3.6L Chevy V6 Transplant?
The LS motors are a tight fit and require special headers and the steering shaft has to be reworked. Much bigger and it wouldn't fit. The V-6 might be wider than the LS motor or the exhaust or valve covers could be an issue or even motor height depending on the bore and stroke. Lots of variables there. I really think making it fit is easier than making it run.
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What about a 3.6L Chevy V6 Transplant?
First things first. Will it even fit? How wide is the V-6 at it's widest point? How long is it? How far from the rear of the engine to the center of the shifter? Then compare it to the Z engine bay and shifter location. If it won't fit the point is mute... It is a lot of work and the modern EFI can be difficult to separate from the rest of the cars harness. Many of these newer cars have BCU's. These Body Control Units have to be happy or the car may not start or run properly.
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Welder Suggestions
Remoto, That looks good. Are you doing a series of single tacks or short sections of weld?
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Disc Brake Options for 280Z: best street package value
wheee! What's wrong with those??? As a side note Chuck and Jeff both race these cars so they have high expectations. Their endorsement of the stock system is pretty high praise. I would like rear disc simply to do away with the drum adjustments. The rear calipers don't have to be very large on a light car as the fronts do a lot of the work. Chas has a good point about reestablishing the correct brake bias...
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Old school frame repairs
That's pretty cool... $3500 on ebay http://www.ebay.com/itm/THE-MIGHTY-DUKE-POWER-PULL-MD301FP-PORTABLE-FRAME-MACHINE-AUTOBODY-REPAIR-SYSTEM-/121422019895