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Just do some careful measuring of what you have now then check out the specifications for whatever tire you’re considering. The specs are usually pretty detailed, you can probably get real close on paper before you actually have to buy something and try it.

Old 12-03-2020, 05:40 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #141 (permalink)
Author of "101 Projects"
 
Wayne 962's Avatar
With the electrical pretty much all sorted (just need to put the center console back together after I replace the damaged tachometer gauge ring), it's time to move onto the brakes. Arguably the most important part of the car, these haven't been touched in 37 years, so that means every component needs to be looked at:

- Brake master cylinder rebuilt or replaced
- Hard brake lines cleaned
- Rubber brake hoses replaced
- Wheel cylinders rebuilt or replaced
- Clutch master cylinder rebuilt or replaced
- Clutch slave cylinder rebuilt or replaced
- Clutch hose replaced
- Rear brake light pressure switch replaced (or removed and tested)
- Brake shoes measured and checked.

So, in order to find / order parts for the car, I took off (so far what I needed) in order to hunt them down. I'm happy to report the following:

- Found NOS front wheel cylinders in the UK and ordered four of them. Two on the left and two on the right. They make cheap Chinese knockoffs of the Triumph ones, but these are the wrong sized bore (.75" for the knockoffs, versus .70" for what's on the car right now). These should hopefully be here next week.

- I found a replacement NOS cylinder for the clutch master cylinder. It's not a very common one - I had to match up the part numbers on the cylinder to one I found on eBay. That took some time, but it should be here next week.

- I found a clutch slave cylinder that is made by Girling (same manufacturer as the original one), and nearly identical, but a slightly newer one that is used with scratch-built race cars. It will look the same, it's the same manufacturer, but it's new stock.

- Same with the brake master cylinder - I ordered a new Girling master cylinder from Pegasus Racing. This should work very well. I spent a long time cleaning the old one only to discover some pitting in the cylinder walls. I'm not sure if it would make a difference in leakage, but the master cylinder needs to be 100% foolproof, so the brand new one, in the right size bore, will work well.

- The brake shoes look like they should on a car that only has about 3,000 miles on it - brand new. I didn't anticipate seeing any oddness there, so I will just reuse them. They basically look brand new.

- Brake lines - I found a good, new replacement for the clutch slave, but I haven't started looking for the front or rear lines together because they will probably sold as a set (and I haven't taken off the rear quite yet). I also haven't taken off the rear wheel cylinder yet, but I think I know what's on there. But I will see later on tonight or tomorrow.

When I was taking all of this stuff off, I made sure to use a respirator, and some wet towels to wipe down the brake dust. On old cars like these, it's almost a 100% certainty that the dust contains asbestos particles, so you want to be 100% careful. I used a P100 mask (similar to what one uses for painting cars - VOC blocker).

Working to remove everything off of one corner per night is a good way to get it done while waiting for the parts. Once the parts arrive, reassembling everything should be very quick and easy!

-Wayne









Old 12-03-2020, 06:09 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #142 (permalink)
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Is that just Microsoft Word that you’re using to write up your manual? Looks real nice, is it also how you wrote your other books to send them to a graphics person or did you use different software?

Enjoying reading about this project.

Thanks,
Rutager
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Old 12-04-2020, 02:56 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #145 (permalink)
Author of "101 Projects"
 
Wayne 962's Avatar
Yes, it's MS Word. All I do is create headings and sub-headings, and then you can click through them on the left-hand side to jump to the various areas. I don't insert photos, but instead I use a program called "Greenshot" that takes really easy screenshots. So, if I see something on a webpage - screenshot it, and then control-v (paste) into word. Literally faster than typing this sentence. Making it easy to gather and store information makes this process of restoration easier. I also have a big folder I put all the receipts and handwritten notes into - I will scan all of those from time-to-time. Then, I stuff everything into a OneDrive folder on the computer, and it's automatically sync'ed to the cloud. So, I can refer to a photo in the folder on my phone, again, in less time than it takes to write this sentence.

The books were all written in word, and then passed off to the designers to lay it out. Lots of fights about photo sizes and word count cuts and stuff. I wrote the books in what I believed to be "final form" - I.E. don't change a thing without expecting a fight from me. The best editors left me alone. The worst one literally made about 100 changes per 101 projects. Silly, ridiculous stuff like they would take my sentence:

Be careful when you remove the throw-out bearing to mark its original position so that you can place it back in the correct spot upon reassembly.

and make it something like:

When you remove the throw-out bearing, be careful to mark its original position for correct reassembly in the proper place.

Basically the same exact thing, but just changing the style to be more annoying and less "conversational". I fought back hard.

I was a bit difficult back then - I remember having a big hissy fit over the font they used for the engine book - I wanted them to use the same font as they had for the 101 Porsche 911 book because I thought the 101 book was near perfect in design. I lost that fight. Now, I realize I should have just said "okay". I did win some other important fights - like putting all of the technical and parts info in the back of the engine book. The compromise was the microscopic font size we had to use. I now need reading glasses to read my own book! But it was worth it - that engine book was the most comprehensive and best one I did, I think.

Ahh, the good ole' days!

-Wayne
Old 12-04-2020, 05:11 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #146 (permalink)
 
Author of "101 Projects"
 
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Boy, you guys are spoiled. When I ran Pelican, stuff that was in stock shipped the same day. With other parts suppliers, the ship times are terrible! Seriously, why would it take a week to ship something out that they have in stock? There are only two answers - either they *don't* have it in stock or they just have one pothead in the warehouse who's playing solitaire and surfing Facebook all day long instead of shipping packages. At Pelican, we had an end-of-day report and if stuff could ship, we didn't go home until it shipped! 99.99% of the time, Pelican shipping delays were caused by our vendors (sometimes also potheads playing solitaire and surfing Facebook all day long). Trying to get parts delivered for these English cars is terrible. The only place that seems to be great is eBay, because Sellers are actually held accountable by customers with the feedback forum. I think I'm just going to use eBay vendors from now on.

*rant off*.

-Wayne
Old 12-04-2020, 07:40 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #147 (permalink)
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Wayne, if you are not happy with the hydraulic parts you ordered, have you considered sending the parts off the car to Eric at PMB?
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1970 VW Sunroof Bus - "The Magic Bus"
1971 Jaguar XKE 2+2 V12 Coupe - {insert name here}
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Old 12-04-2020, 08:45 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #148 (permalink)
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Oz
Posts: 9,251
Welcome to the wonderful world of 70's British automobiles.

Are you familiar with Moss Motors? Always had good experiences with them.

https://mossmotors.com/


"The Durango '95 purred away real horrowshow. A nice warm vibraty feeling all through your guttiwuts."
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Old 12-04-2020, 09:28 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #149 (permalink)
Author of "101 Projects"
 
Wayne 962's Avatar
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nostril Cheese View Post
Are you familiar with Moss Motors? Always had good experiences with them.

https://mossmotors.com/
Yup. Ordered Thanksgiving day, Thursday Nov 26. Didn't ship until the following Thursday, more than a week later. Had to send them a nasty note through their chat system in order to get the order "kick started" or something like that (they don't even accept or have a public email address). Two parts, a coil wire and a nut for the wire - both showing in stock. Definitely not Pelican, that's for sure.

-Wayne
Old 12-05-2020, 02:14 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #150 (permalink)
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So, now that you own something classically British, you get to learn a whole slew of new phrases!

Q: Why do the British drink warm beer? A: Lucas refrigerators
Q: What is Lord Lucas’ real name? A: The Prince of Darkness
Q: What were Lord Lucas’ deaths bed words? A: Don’t drive at night

There are more, but that’s all I remember at this point...
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Old 12-05-2020, 05:20 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #151 (permalink)
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Oz
Posts: 9,251
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wayne 962 View Post
Yup. Ordered Thanksgiving day, Thursday Nov 26. Didn't ship until the following Thursday, more than a week later. Had to send them a nasty note through their chat system in order to get the order "kick started" or something like that (they don't even accept or have a public email address). Two parts, a coil wire and a nut for the wire - both showing in stock. Definitely not Pelican, that's for sure.

-Wayne
Wow, thats surprising.

I've been working on old Jags, Minis and Lotus over the last year. They have been on top of it for me. Had some trouble finding brake stuff as well.
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Old 12-05-2020, 05:26 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #152 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tcora View Post
So, now that you own something classically British, you get to learn a whole slew of new phrases!

Q: Why do the British drink warm beer? A: Lucas refrigerators
Q: What is Lord Lucas’ real name? A: The Prince of Darkness
Q: What were Lord Lucas’ deaths bed words? A: Don’t drive at night

There are more, but that’s all I remember at this point...
Who invented the intermittent wiper? Lucas.
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Old 12-05-2020, 08:55 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #153 (permalink)
Author of "101 Projects"
 
Wayne 962's Avatar
Quote:
Originally Posted by HarryD View Post
Wayne, if you are not happy with the hydraulic parts you ordered, have you considered sending the parts off the car to Eric at PMB?
Well, they are not here yet. They are supposedly NOS stuff, so I'm hoping that all will be okay...

-Wayne
Old 12-05-2020, 03:41 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #154 (permalink)
Author of "101 Projects"
 
Wayne 962's Avatar
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nostril Cheese View Post
Wow, thats surprising.

I've been working on old Jags, Minis and Lotus over the last year. They have been on top of it for me. Had some trouble finding brake stuff as well.
A trick that I know about, but others may not, is to go directly to www.ebay.co.uk and search there. There's a lot of stuff that is set to "not ship to the United States", but if you find something there that you need, you an usually convince the seller to do that. Or, I have a colleague in the UK who can receive stuff too...

-Wayne
Old 12-05-2020, 03:42 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #155 (permalink)
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Greetings Wayne;
You are progressing quite well.
As for the tires, in the 37 years I owned the car, I never had to add air to the tires.
Is there a need to get new tires at all?
When I went looking for tires for the second Probe that I had, I found some in Austrailia.
I never bought them since we sold the car to Mark in England.
Phil
Old 12-05-2020, 04:35 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #156 (permalink)
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I'm curious about the wheels. Picture shows holes for lugs, but other pictures show a center lock type design?
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Old 12-05-2020, 11:55 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #157 (permalink)
Author of "101 Projects"
 
Wayne 962's Avatar
Quote:
Originally Posted by Probe16 View Post
Greetings Wayne;
You are progressing quite well.
As for the tires, in the 37 years I owned the car, I never had to add air to the tires.
Is there a need to get new tires at all?
When I went looking for tires for the second Probe that I had, I found some in Austrailia.
I never bought them since we sold the car to Mark in England.
Phil
The tires are worn on the back where they were rubbing against the body. Plus, after nearly 50 years, they are not very soft and are a bit hard, which means that they will not have good traction. The existing tires would look good for show tires, and I will have them save the old ones, but in order to be safe, new ones will need to be fitted for sure...

-Wayne
Old 12-12-2020, 11:54 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #158 (permalink)
Author of "101 Projects"
 
Wayne 962's Avatar
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nostril Cheese View Post
I'm curious about the wheels. Picture shows holes for lugs, but other pictures show a center lock type design?
Yes, these wheels have an adapter that uses the lugs to change it to a center-lock design. The center lock hub bolts to the wheel using the existing lug holes. A bit odd if you ask me - I hadn't seen that before...

-Wayne
Old 12-12-2020, 11:56 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #159 (permalink)
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