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Carl Beck
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Everything posted by Carl Beck
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Hi Gus: I just caught up with this thread... Glad to see that you started the restoration the first of the year. That is "a rust free" 240Z ;-) Perhaps the cleanest 71 I've seen in years. Great to know you caught the surface rust before it did much damage. Make sure you treat all the bare metal you have exposed with Ospho. You can whip the small amount of remaining tag down with some lacquer thinner - then go over everything with some Ospho. It will prevent flash rust until you get it to the body shop. Surface rust - like in the doors should also be wire brushed and then soaked down with Ospho. You can simply use a spray bottle - and spray it in all the crack and nooks. If you have any trouble locating any parts - just drop me an e-mail, or give me a call. Most importantly take your time and ENJOY the Process. FWIW, Carl B.
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As far as I know - they are only "included" when you order a new Drive Shaft Assembly. I've never seen a rebuild kit that included them. Time to look for a good used assembly... FWIW, Carl B.
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Interesting - how long ago did you find one on E-Bay? There were about 59 240Z's purchased for the Program - several were "Parts Cars" that had blown engines. When the Program was shut down - there were about three complete shells, still waiting in the body shops. 37 {Thirty Seven} 240Z's were completed for the Vintage Z Program. The VIN numbers are listed on the Z Car Home Page's - Vintage Z Register. http://www.classiczcars.com/forums/showthread.php?8106-Anyone-Know-Nissan-Restorations At this point we have about 80% of them found and registered there. Do you know what the VIN is for the car you bought your Father? FWIW, Carl B.
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Under the Fair Use clause of the copyright laws - I reproduce in part and as a reference - the New York Times article of 23 Oct. 1969. Anyone that would like to read the complete article can search the N.Y.Times historical archives on-line. There is a fee for service and you have to agree to their copyright agreement. Anyone can also access the L.A. Times historical archives - to find their coverage as well. There are other on-line services that offer historical newspaper databases as well. Sorry for the brief reply- but .. everyone can do their own research and decide for themselves.. FWIW, Carl B.
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Hi Alan: No not really - just too limited on my time right now. FWIW, Carl B.
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I wrote and you quoted, By March of 1970 the first couple thousand - that would be 2000. Ok - 1553 Jan+2061 Feb = 3614 that could easily have been in the US by March. Even if you take out the 7% for the entire year that Canada received {1201} and the 2% that went to other countries for that entire year according to Nissan {324} - you still have 2089 by March. If you believe that the cars were delivered to the Dealers and sold in sequential serial number order - I can understand your doubts. If you believe that the Dealers actually let go of the first cars they received - and did not in fact retain them to show and demonstrate to build customer orders..then I guess you might be right. I believe that all the cars were well mixed having been loaded/off loaded at the Ports, then shuffled around again as they were loaded onto trucks and trains for delivery to the Dealers. I believe that most Dealers retained some of the first cars as showroom displays and demo's - and only sold them after the supply became more steady. So it wouldn't surprise me at all if cars that arrived in Jan or Feb would have not been actually sold and delivered until April or May. Very possibility correct. FWIW, Carl B.
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Hi Chris: Actually I was at the local Porsche Dealership trying to trade my 67 911S on a 70 911E. We couldn't get together on the bottom line - and I was on my way back to the Base when I passed the Datsun Dealership and saw the 240Z in the showroom. March 14th 1970 was my 25th birthday - Paul Jaremko and I pushed the car off the showroom floor at Valley Datsun in Spokane, Washington after the dealership closed for the day - Paul hadn't driven one yet so he and I took it for a drive. I actually bought the car that night - as Paul and I didn't get back to the dealership until pretty late. Bill Jones is on this forum - Bill had ordered a 70 2000 roadster - but canceled that when Paul gave him a copy of the Oct. 69 showroom sales brochure. Bill then ordered a 240Z - but he was shipped out before it arrived. Bill had ordered a Silver Z - and 1777 was silver. Bill used to tell me that I got HIS Z.. Of course Bill did return and took delivery of a Silver 71. FWIW, Carl B.
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Hi Alex: Can you check the Date of Production as listed on the Data Tag on the Drivers Door - - Several other cars with higher VINS on my list have reported production dates of 03/72 I'd keep the white interior FWIW, Carl
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Happy Anniversary Jim! The Z looks GREAT. Ready for another 40 years. Take care of yourself and you could still be driving it then! Lots of people here in Florida are still driving at 101 years of age. regards, Carl B.
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A couple of collectors ask me about that FB Battery when the car was up for auction. The one zed2 pictured came originally in the 72 Models that I sold. It was one noticable change among several that the 72's came though with. It looks the same as the one that came in my Blue 72 for that matter. It's doubtful - but I'll Poll the original owners to see if any of them have pictures of their engine compartments when their cars were new - you never know. FWIW, Carl B.
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Hi Koss: Gee.... to bad you didn't give me a call. We could have meet and made a trip to "Z Mecca". Jim is located in North Tampa. Not too far from ZDoc's. Good to hear you found a 240Z that you like... Do you know what items will be inspected / required to allow import of the car into Norway? FWIW, Carl B.
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By March of 1970 the first couple thousand Datsun 240Z's had arrived in the U.S. I bought HLS30 01777 March 14, 1970. The East and West Coast States seemed to get most of them - and most people in the Mid-Western States had no idea what the car was when they first saw one on the roads. Actually - the man that made the arrangements for the International Preview held in N.Y. in Oct - thought he remembered the car that was there being Gold. As I recall when I talked to Bob Sharp he said the car at the New York Auto Show, held later was Green. "Lucky 13" - Lucky to have survived the past 41 years. Lucky that someone that knew its significance grabbed it and preserved it. FWIW, Carl B.
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I'd take at least 4 sets - metal would be better. In any case accurate fit would be most important. FWIW, Carl B.
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Hi Dave: Yes, thanks. English and Spelling were my worst subjects in Grade School, High School and College. I still use Eudora as an E-Mail Client because it has the best Spell Checker I've found. Glad to hear that things worked out for you on the repairs. Carl B.
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+1 for this !! Not up your ally - but door skins - really excellent OEM quality would be required. Needed presently or not - many people I know would buy two or three pares just for spares if the price was at all reasonable. FWIW, Carl B.
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In my personal experience - synthetic oil {Mobile 1} reduced my engine operating temperatures by 15 degrees here in Florida. That's a big difference when it's 90 degrees plus outside. Nothing else was changed other than the oil. Secondly - with my 70 SS 396 El Camino - when left sitting for 60 to 90 days - the lifter clatter at startup would scare you. Switched to Mobile 1 - end of lifter clatter. Same story with my 69 428 Super Cobra Jet in the Cougar Eliminator. {both have been sold several years ago}. I don't have heat nor lifter clatter in my Chevy 2500HD Pickup - so I run Valvoline dino oil and change oil and filters every 6K miles. {Factory recommended service}. Our 2009 M/B E-350 runs Mobile 1 - per the factory recommendation, if you want to keep the warranty intact. Oil and filter change once per year or 12,000 miles. With the carb's and the use of chokes on start up - an overly rich mixture can dilute the oil in the crank case with gasoline. All my Z's get oil and filter changed every 4,000 miles. In my opinion the bottom line - for certain issues - the synthetics are well worth the money. Also one has to wonder how much wear or how much increased HP you get when you reduce friction enough to reduce engine temperatures by 15 degrees. FWIW, Carl B.
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Somehow "unfortunately" and "they were beyond helpful" seem somewhat a contradiction in the same sentence. Did you mean "fortunately" or "they were less than helpful" Seems you stayed with them... My only claim was handled in a very impressive manor - one reason I recommend them to everyone. FWIW, Carl B.
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The 280Z springs are quite a bit stiffer - looks like you could cut a coil or 1 1/2 coils off. As I recall the 280Z's sit higher because they have a taller isolator at the top of the strut. <pre> 1977 280Z 240Z FRONT Spring Rate: 103 lb/in 83 lb/in Free Length: 15.98 in 15.2 in Active Coils: 9.5 8.5 REAR Spring Rate: 127.7 103 lb/in Free Length: 15.43 in 15.0 in Active Coils: 8.5 9.5 </Pre> FWIW, Carl B.
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Interesting discussion thread. I'll mention this only as an alternative for anyone that will need a set of Show Quality Stock Bumpers for a 70-72 240Z in the near future. I have a couple sets of 240Z bumpers that are in pretty good condition, but would need small dents removed and then re-chromed. Which I plan to have done. The local plating shop wants 4 to 6 weeks to get them done. I'd have to get $1195.00 a pair for them plus actual packaging and shipping costs. Even then, the buyer would have to supply his own rubbers ;-) So they would be a couple hundred more than the SS reproductions. On the plus side - re-chromed bumpers will actually have better chrome on them than OEM {which wasn't too hot to begin with}. They would be "Stock" and you'd know for sure what the total cost would be for a show quality set. FWIW, Carl B.
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From: http://carscoop.blogspot.com/2011/03/donations-for-japan-continue-fiat.html ---- Quote - -- - The donations for Japan keep coming in, with Mercedes-Benz’s parent company Daimler announcing today that it will provide €2 million (about US$2.8 million at today’s exchange rates) as immediate aid for the victims of the earthquake and tsunami in the Asian country. Daimler said it has approximately 13,000 employees in Japan through its subsidiaries Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and Bus Corporation, Mercedes-Benz Japan, as well as Daimler Financial Services. The Fiat Group, which includes Alfa Romeo, Lancia, the Fiat brand, Abarth, Maserati and Ferrari, also announced a donation for relief efforts in Japan, albeit a much smaller amount at €100,000 (about $US140,000). While we’re not saying that this is a competition as all donations are welcome, we can’t but think that Fiat’s contribution, which equates to roughly half the price of a new Ferrari model or around 0.8% of the total compensation Ferrari boss Luca Cordero di Montezemolo and Fiat Group CEO Sergio Marchionne received in 2010, is somewhat embarrassing for the size of the Italian company. - - - - - - - - End Quote - - - - - "somewhat embarrassing"??.... indeed. Also note the difference in wording between M/B's contribution "as immediate aid" and FIAT's contribution for "relief efforts". M/B's wording would seem to indicate that they will be contributing even more past the immediate period. Still these are very small numbers in my opinion. FWIW, Carl B.
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To get food and water to tens of thousands of people in dire need - it takes a lot of MONEY. There are economies of scale in these situations as well. We usually use "Samaritan's Purse" for relief contributions. An organization that the church my wife attends/volunteers at supports. 90% of the funds go to the specific relief effort with about 5% for administration and 5% for further fund raising. http://www.samaritanspurse.com They assure that all funds donated to a specific relief effort - go to that effort. If the needs of that relief effort are fully satisfied - the remain funds go to the next relief effort. They do not accumulate nor hold funds donated from relief efforts, like the Red Cross. Samaritan's Purse have built a strong reputation for being effective with well organized logistics. They have already shipped 93 Tons of food/water from the U.S. via a 747 direct to the Kadena Air Force Base in Okinawa. The USAF will air lift it to the effected area's in Northern Japan, where volunteers from "Samaritan's Purse" will distribute it to local shelters. FWIW, Carl B.
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Is it just me - but does this strike anyone as being more than a little out of whack???? One Million Dollars - REALLY???? {see .jpg below} If Carlos gets $9,500,000.00 per year, we can guess that his top say 6 executives receive per year. http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/06/23/us-nissan-ghosn-compensation-idUSTRE65M0AS20100623 So NISSAN is contributing $500,000.00 to the Red Cross for the Japanese Relief Effort - and asking employees, owners and fan's to kick in a matching $500,000.00 - - So NISSAN can meet its pledge of ONE Million Dollars. I should think that Carlos and his gang alone would contribute at least $5,000,000.00, and NISSAN USA Corporate could kick in at least $40,000,000.00. NISSAN's Advertising budget in the U.S. alone was around $1,190,000,000.00 {YES $1.19 Billion Dollars}. What Are These People Thinking???? ONE MILLION DOLLARS??? FWIW, Carl B.
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rear backing plates for 71z brakes and silicone fluid
Carl Beck replied to EverRude's topic in Wheels & Brakes
You are correct. Silicone fluid also protects the rubber parts in your brake and clutch systems. It will not peel your paint if you spill a little either. The downside is that it can be harder to bleed and should not be used for competition. I've ran it all my Z's since 1975. It greatly extends the life of brake and clutch components. FWIW, Carl B. -
Cars over the years.....Datsun, Jeep and Porsche win!
Carl Beck replied to mally002's topic in Open Discussions
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Google "Targa California" as suggested before - you will see that the Targa California runs April 7-9. http://www.sportscardigest.com/targa-california-2011-information/ If I shipped a car from the East Coast - I might just go on both .... FWIW, Carl B.