Return of The Hunter-Gatherer

A Mini Cooper Shows Up

A Mini Cooper Shows Up

The rains have abated, at least for a couple of days, and as a result we’re running the roads again bringing in new work.  The Mini pictured here has a starter that doesn’t start.  We’ll see what we can do about that.  The MGB engine in the foreground has a problem which we’re not even going to try to fix.  To prep it for re-ringing, John Flex-Honed the cylinders.

Badly Cracked # 2 Cylinder

Major Crack in #2 Cylinder Bore. Click for Enlargement. Valve relief means this is a later 18V block

Butch washed it up and discovered this crack, just above the two black Sharpie-Marker lines.  The brown shading is caused by running a torch on it to see if it opened up. It did.  If this were an MG XPAG block we’d send it out and have it sleeved, but it isn’t, so we’re going to replace it with another one which was quite a puzzle to us a few years ago.  Although it ran strongly enough, oil pressure was quite poor.  This was  due to a missing rear cam bearing !

John & Butch Install a Convertible Top

John & Butch Install a Convertible top

John and Butch also found some time to start installing this convertible top.

Next week we’ll take a peek under that car cover.

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Hunter-Gatherer Society

TR3 loaded for delivery to New England 1000

May 20: A Well Known TR3 On It's Way to Next Event

Usually by this time of year we are spending a lot of time travelling the highways moving cars like this back and forth, but as of now we haven’t settled into that Hunter-Gatherer routine yet.  This Triumph was outgoing work this afternoon, and almost as soon as we loaded it a magnificent springtime thunder & lightening storm broke out, and it  actually dried things out just a little bit.

If this car looks familiar, maybe it’s because you’ve seen it on the cover of the January, 2011 issue of Hemmings Sports & Exotic Cars.  We’re delivering it to the owner who’s about to put it thru it’s paces on the New England 1000 (we think).

Butch finishes up with the Morgan +4 Morgan chassis

Butch Installs New Chrome Flashed King Pins in This Morgan Chassis

Butch has finished up with this Morgan +4 rolling chassis.  The king pins he’s installing have been chrome plated to improve durability.  Yes we had a couple of extra sets made.  Inquire.

John & Butch prep the OEW MGB for retrimming

John & Butch prep the O.E.W. MGB for retrimming

Replacement floor pans for early MGB’s don’t have the captive hardware for mounting the seats.  It’s really only a problem for the front anchorages which are located over a chassis crossmember, and are therefore blind on the bottom.  Butch is measuring out to do a retrofit.  We weld a square nut & cage to a 1″ piece of sheetmetal, whack a 3/4″ hole in the floor and pop rivet it down.  It’s a lot easier to do this before the floor goes permanently.  John is installing the carpet snaps in the driver’s footwell.

a herd of cattle grazing next to the shop

a herd of cattle grazing next to the shop

Because of the high cost of fuel, we’re’ mowing around the shop organically again.  Seth Holton brought in this herd of 30 cattle this week.  They knock five acres of grass nice and flat about every two days and fertilize at the same time.  My Morgan in the cellar of the shop is temporarily mud bound as a result, but it’s going to have to stop raining sometime.  Probably.

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‘Gunga Din’ Gets a New Tank

“Gunga Din” is arguably the most famous Vincent motorcycle of all, having served as the prototype for the Black Shadow and Black Lightning, as well as having an extensive racing history.  This is not Gunga Din.  However , it apparently has enough Gunga Din cast-offs, such as possibly the fuel tank and the engine cases, to claim some provenance of its own.  Your scribe is not qualified to explain the Gunga Din family tree, but there are people known to us who can.  What we’re interested in is the tank.
(name redacted) was commissioned by the current owner of this motorcycle to make him a new tank, which he did.  There was enough left of the old tank to make up a mold .  Bear in mind that as we like to point out, there are no plastic fillers in use here, this is all fiberglass.
This is a bottom view of the tank, which also showcases (name redacted) fiberglass skills.  There may be an unusual opportunity available for some motorcycle enthusiast somewhere who deperately wants to own a Gunga Din replica, too, because (name redacted tells me that in his first attempt at fiberglass wouldn’t gel!   Move quickly in securing it, because with a little paint, who’d know ? http://www.motorcycleclassics.com/motorcycle-reviews/historic-vincent-gunga-din.aspx?page=5


John Bryan behind the wheel of his TF 1500 for the 1st time in 45 years

Why is This Man Smiling ?

John Bryan took his TF off the road in 1966 when a connecting rod bearing went South.  Here he is coming back from a test drive Monday morning, behind the wheel again for the first time in 45 years !    Truly a Kodak moment.

A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE IS A DANGEROUS THING DEPT

Home made XPAG tappets

Make Yer Own Lifters !

Here are those amateur restorer-made XPAG cam followers mentioned last week.  Please !  don’t try this at home.

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A Couple of Magic Tricks

 

MG TF

A local MG

 

A year or two ago this MG TF showed up here with a valve thru a piston, so we had a valve job done and tossed  in a used set of pistons and  a used cam*.  Now it runs great.   It’s here right now for its periodic check up.  We replaced the rack boots, counseled the owner to hold steady on the steering rack for the time being, and also tended to a leaky left rear wheel cylinder.  

The left rear brake assembly of an MG TF

TF left rear brake assembly

 

The leaking wheel cylinder kinda’ pee’d on the brake linings a bit.  This particular style of Lockheed cylinder, with a handbrake lever acting thru a slot on a mechanical slave piston in the top of the bore doesn’t hone very well.  Well, you can hone it, at a rough cost of one brake hone per cylinder, so we just replace ’em.  It’s cheaper.  Because the right hand brake assembly was O.K. for now, we did a little shuffle.

John points to the trailing (upper) brake shoe

John points to the trailing (upper) shoe

 

Rather than install a new set of brake shoes for $65.00, we elected to equalize the rear braking by shifting both left rear shoes to the “trailing” position, which is at the top on a TD or TF.  The direction of the moving wheel cylinder piston is downwards into the path of rotation, which makes the lower shoe the “leading” shoe, and also creates the “self-servo” effect which reduces pedal effort in a car with drum brakes.  Sometimes we’ll get in a TD or TF with the front wheel cylinders reversed.  These cars have great braking efficency backing up, but are a real handfull moving in a forward direction.  

An XPAG block with a nasty water jacket crack

A nasty water jacket crack on an XPAG block. Click to enlarge

 

Around the same time we were cleaning up the used parts shelf to the benefit of the TF, we had a long dormant TD engine delivered to us for overhaul.  Once we got it cleaned up (the casting was baked to carbonize 50 years of sludge, and then run thru a steel shot cabinet), we found this particularly nasty water jacket crack.  Back  in the day you might have tossed it on the metal pile and found another one, but that luxury is long past.  

XPAG block repaired by cold pinning

An elegant repair: XPAG block after cold pinning. Click to enlarge

 

Now we have to fix ’em.  Enlarge this picture and take a look.  We’ve had the crack repaired by a process known as “cold pinning”.  It works roughly like this:  a hole is drilled at each end of the crack as a “stopper”, threaded, and filled with a cast iron dowel.  Then another hole is drilled partially overlapping the first, and threaded & doweled again, until the crack is completely filled.  If you look closely, at roughly one inch intervals the pinning is reinforced perpendicularly.  Because heat isn’t involved, new stress cracks common to weldng don’t develop.  Once the paint went on, it was never to be seen again.  

Cross Ram intake manifolds

unusual intake manifolds

 

Now just to see if anyone’s still paying attention, the first three people who can identify this intake set up will receive a free oil filter for their british car.  

*The Asterisk:  The used cam mentioned in the first paragraph came out of an amateur restored TD, and proved once again how a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.  Because the cylinder head had been skimmed several times and there was insufficient clearance for valve adjustment, instead of buying shorter pushrods or rocker pedestal shims, or both, the owner simply fired up his lathe and made his own set of tappets… with disasterous results.  Because they wern’t heat treated, they quickly failed and sent shrapnel absolutely everywhere inside that engine.  Many thousands of dollars later when we were I.S.O. a servicable used cam for the TF, we took another look at the one from the wreckage and discovered the tin coating polished right off.  Et Voila !   One man’s folly became another man’s serendipity.

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