Wednesday, November 28, 2007

More dents be gone

After a few days of being depressed with the weather and inactive on the Triumph front, I finally had a fit of enthusiasm and decided to start pulling out the remaining large dents in the 2000. At some point, the car has had a powerful smack in the rear end, pushing the rear bumper forward and in the process denting the rear valance and deforming the rear quarter bumpers.

After removing the rear bumper, I resumed using my favourite dent removal method, viz. a ratchet strap and a heavy object, this time the heavy object being a barn, hopefully not much chance of that moving.
With the car in gear and the hand brake on hard, the dent was eased out by pulling on a bolt through the rear bumper mounting point, whist at the same time it was given a few sharp blows with a hammer to help shock the dent out.







Once again, this method seems to have worked out quite well, the only panel issue remaining being a crease on the left hand side above the bumper. This crease did not come out when pulling on the mounting hole, so will have to be pulled out a bit more by welding a nail to it and then pull on that again, a job for another day.

Popped over to see Dave (sideways) Powell last night to see about a bit of work on my spare gearbox and a natter. Is always fun going to see Dave, as the road between Ross-on-Wye, M50 roundabout to Much Marcle can be a big ball of fun to drive, with a mix of good gradients, slow and fast corners, giving me a chance to see how the 2000 handles.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

A sound improvement

Have been looking into the reasons for the whistling noise inside the 2000 when I noticed a steady stream of cold air coming into the car around the passenger door. A few weeks ago I bought a length of door seal to replace the section on the drivers side door, but noticing the air coming in, I chose to fit it onto the passenger door instead, now this was not as quite as simple as you might hope.
Looking at the seals on the passenger side doors, the seal was one way around, but on the drivers side, they were the other way, so which way to fit the new seal? After looking through my workshop manual, to find no useful information, I decided to copy the drivers side and success. On my next trip out that annoying whistling noise had disappeared.

Work continues on the passenger side front wing, removing the final traces on the dent, it's getting better now, I just need to find the right day to set about spraying it, which could be a bit of a job in itself given the colder and wetter weather at the moment.

For a change I have been going a bit of work on a GT6, not mine unfortunately, but one belonging to a guy from the Club Triumph forum. He told me he thought the brakes were not very good, well we found out why today, the front passenger side caliper was siezed, as was the rear drivers side slave cylinder, no wonder it did not stop very well.
While I was there, I also checked the trunnions and wheel bearings. The trunnions were full of grease and the wheel bearings did not have enough, so that was soon rectified with fresh gear oil in the trunnions and some more grease for the bearings. Should be alright for a MOT soon after it has battery clamp fitted and a new seal put on the filler cap.

Monday, November 05, 2007

A few more little jobs

Have been working around the 2000 again, catching up on some of those small but never the less annoying little jobs.
For a while now the car has not had a drivers side parcel tray, which fits under the steering column and can be very useful for holding bits like mobile phones or cash. Trouble is that these trays are not to easy to get hold of, second hand ones normally water damaged from leaking windscreens. I did however manage to find a Triumph parts breaker who wanted £30 for one, which I guess is a fair price, but they would only accept payment by cheque and I would be buying it unseen with no guarantee of the quality of it.

At this point I remembered I still had the front parcel tray from the Dolomite 1500 I scrapped a couple of years ago. So after a bit of cutting and a new outer bracket made up the tray was soon fitted, saving me £30 and having it fitted a week sooner than if I bought the second hand one.
I will probably still keep an eye out for a proper MkI parcel tray, but for now this ought to do for now and might even fit the radio in.

One of the rear light clusters had a cracked lense, so I managed to pick-up one cheap on eBay and give it a through clean before fitting, you can really see the difference between the two in the picture. Unfortunately the other side was not so keen to be removed for cleaning, needing one of the securing bolts to be cut out. It seems the gasket for the lense had been leaking, corroding the fixing bolt. Luckily I had another backing piece, so this was not a problem, but it will need a new gasket to prevent water getting back in.

Meanwhile I have finished stripping parts from the MkI spare front end. There was not much left worth having after the two wings and the nose cone, but I did remove steering column and the pedals, as they are useful for anybody who is converting a MkI 2000/2500 from auto to manual. If you want those pedals or the column, please contact me through blogger or PM me (SpitBang) on the Club Triumph forum