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  • Teeson1111
    replied
    Originally posted by YOLO7 View Post
    I've just spent the last few evenings reading through this forum - and I must say its awesome. Its has some great info and a great story with drama and action. i'm sold on the forum and have subscribed.
    thank you! appreciate that. lol never thought of the roll over or whatever as drama, more as something that just happened

    Originally posted by 95naSTA View Post
    Loving all the fab work in here.
    thanks my dude

    Leave a comment:


  • 95naSTA
    replied
    Loving all the fab work in here.

    Leave a comment:


  • YOLO7
    replied
    I've just spent the last few evenings reading through this forum - and I must say its awesome. Its has some great info and a great story with drama and action. i'm sold on the forum and have subscribed.

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied


    Portugal. The Man.

    If you haven't heard of them, you probably will soon (or you just did because I told you). A bit weird but super catchy indy pop-ey. Woodstock has some good stuff on it, and they also have a few other notable songs worth finding.

    so with the engine running its time to get the rest of the stuff in order. Still needs a coolant system, wiring cleaned up, aero fitted, etc on and on.

    finally manned up and cut the VW mounting brackets off the rad

    IMG_2187 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2188 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    started sorting out the holes I cut in the rad fan

    IMG_2189 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2191 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    had to get a bit creative to tack it in place

    IMG_2192 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    then glue the back

    IMG_2197 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    forgot to take a final picture but I added glue to the top. should have just masked it and left the glue there but i goofed and started sanding it.

    IMG_2198 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    made a bracket for the oil filter relocation, even though I'm not 100% sure what I'm using yet. I put a bend in it so it would meet up with the sway bar bracket, but the pic doesn't really show it.

    IMG_2199 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    neither does this one

    IMG_2200 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    so I was going to use the stock FC oil cooler because they are huge and have a built in thermostat. Turns out 25 years and thin aluminum is not a good combo. this was what came off from taking the brackets off with my impact gun. Even more came off when i tried to clean it. Its pretty clogged through the fins. So looking into other options, probably aliexpress or B&M.

    so next up then is the power steering cooler

    IMG_2201 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    long time ago Neil gave me an old Mk3 supra oil cooler, so made a mount to hide it in an inconspicuous place.

    IMG_2202 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    checked wheel clearance, plenty of room.

    IMG_2204 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2205 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    I'm mildly concerned its gonna get destroyed by rocks from the wheel but worst case I make a guard of some kind

    IMG_2203 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    cut a bunch of weight and added some clearance to the hood. Still weighs to much, especially compared the my dads vert hood

    so with some help from my buddy Kris we did the over fenders one evening. he came over with his Rivnut tool

    IMG_2219 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2220 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2221 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    can I just say Rivnuts are the coolest thing

    IMG_2222 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    because these are cheap rep's, they don't fit perfect. Or even close in the case of the drivers side one. But a buddy who works at a body shop gave me a tip using a heat gun and a air sprayer to rapidly cool the fibreglass, you can get it to where it should be. Still need to spend a bit more time on it.

    IMG_2229 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2224 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    end of last season my clutch master had failed, it was leaking fluid out the front boot and all over my feet.

    IMG_2223 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    here's why; thats not really round anymore. I was hoping to use a 3/4" bore this time, as the 7/8 makes for pretty firm pedal pressure but I don't think the 3/4 is moving enough fluid.

    Next I set out to get my rear subframe in order

    IMG_2230 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    I had bought those Whiteline bushings to negate some rear negative camber, so had to get the old ones out.

    IMG_2231 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    pretty tough to get it all lined up and in the vice, especially with the weight and size of the trailing arm. so I came up with this. Needed to use quite a bit of torch action to get them out, make sure to remove the tape once its in place

    IMG_2232 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    and now that I had ruined the paint on it, and frankly it wasn't very good in the first place, I wire wheeled all the flaking paint and rust down and sanded it all down

    IMG_2234 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    painted them and let them dry

    IMG_2242 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    then spent way to long setting up for this pic and started assembling

    IMG_2246 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    first problem I encountered was that Whiteline apparently doesn't do their homework. This was too wide buy a few mm

    IMG_2247 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    then the bushing was too wide inside the arm by a few mm, and when I pressed it all in it seems the ID is too tight on the sleeve (it kept bulging out) and the OD of the bushing was a little loose for the trailing arm. Needless to say I'm not impressed, seems to have more play than the old spherical but it does do as advertised for the camber.

    IMG_2248 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    shaving it all down

    IMG_2249 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    forgot to take pics of the PSM trailing arm spherical conversions, but almost broke my vice before switching to the 3 ton press. Was really awkward to fit the whole arm in the press but I found a way. Also, very important pro tip here, assemble the sleeves on the bearing, then put them in a freezer for like 2 hours before even trying to press them in. If theres not ice building up on it, leave it until there is. I did the first one after leaving it in for like 20 min, was a huge fit. 40 min later I go grab the other and it just pops right in, using the 3 ton press both times.

    also a thing I noticed, I was told that poly bushings in the trailing arms and solid everything else would cause binding. I never found this myself but after installing the spherical conversion and seeing how much it pivots through the range of motion I now understand where that train of thought comes from. But that was on the shop floor, once the thing was back in the car the bushing sat very straight. I credit this to my ride height and to the PSM riser bushings.

    IMG_2254 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    then even though more important things are left to do, I decided to loosely fit the skirts. such a mess that makes

    IMG_2257 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    put the hatch on, a rear bumper, S5 tails, 18" rear wheels, 17" front

    IMG_2261 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    you can see how bad the drivers side rear over fits, I'll be adding glass to have it even loosely match the other side

    IMG_2260 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    before putting the fancy suspension back in we thought the rear looked way wider than the front. But now that the rear subframe, full Villains kit with 40mm balljoint spacers, and wheels that kinda fit front and rear it doesn't look as different

    The blue fenders are off my car that was written off, and while they are in rough shape in a few spots I plan to roll the stock grey ones this shell came with to a similar roll

    IMG_2258 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    and here's where we are for now. lot of work down, lots to go. Almost at the point where I'm gonna be stuck waiting on parts to arrive before I can make progress, which is a nice feeling because that means there is less to do. While it does wear my patience thin sometimes, I really do feel thankful for the outlet for my creativity and problem solving skills this car is. hopefully it functions the way I intended and I don't wreck after a season and a half again...

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied
    a buddy recommended this album to me



    Really liked Glass Animal's single off their first album ("Gooey") but was underwhelmed with the rest of it. Will have to re-listen because How To Be A Human Being is amazing through and through.

    taking a break from wiring for a bit;

    IMG_1949 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    long time ago my parents gave me a gift card to a local speed parts store, so I had ordered the necessary parts to convert the factor 5/16th fuel lines to -6 AN. For some reason they only had Aeromotive steel fittings in -5, I learn later that Russel makes aluminum ones are a bit cheaper but oh well.

    IMG_1950 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    flared a test one just to make sure this was all gonna work

    IMG_1956 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1955 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    relocated one of the line holders and welded captive nuts to hold it in place. The factory lines usually dip under the rear seat tubs but since I cut those out, I cut the lines shorter. This also allowed me to snake the fuel lines around

    IMG_1951 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1954 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    also added a line holder, ended up looking exactly like the factory ones.

    IMG_1952 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    done and done.

    Ordered some stuff off of Aliexpress. Knowing that usually when I buy stuff off eBay it requires modification. Some stuff however is good, and works and fits as advertised. The trick is knowing whats good and whats not. Usually this has to come first hand, the reviews on the site are a joke. Usually too these are items that someone else has done the R&D, sent it off to china to be mass produced and then copied and sold by other people. What drives me crazy is when people slap their company name on it and sell it for 400% markup. I was at Formula Drift the other weekend and there was at least 2 vendors selling Alibaba parts for significantly higher prices than listed. Moral of the story, its not a rep part if its made in the same place. And don't send your stuff to china.

    And hey if I find I can buy decent stuff off of Aliexpress than I'll continue to do so

    with that rant out of the way

    IMG_2039 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    catch cans. they have a little dipstick and everything. Other than the inlet being only a -6 (feel like it should be bigger) these seem pretty good. I really like the way the Radium dual cans look, going to try and replicate that.

    IMG_2041 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    universal washer fluid bottles. Planning to use these for the radiator water sprayer, not sure the pumps will supply enough pressure but I'll find out.

    IMG_2068 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    coolant reservoir

    IMG_2069 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2090 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    now the reason I went this way at all, friends have bought these "greddy" gauges and they work great. They aren't 100% the real deal though, the case looks the same but they do not use a brain box like the real ones. They are just a standalone gauge. But they look neat. The water temp gauge however didn't work out of the box. The seller has shipped me a new gauge, but its apparently on the slowest boat from China as I've been waiting over a month for it now. Most stuff took 2-3 weeks to arrive.

    IMG_2040 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    now the worst purchase I've made so far. Its an oil filter relocation kit, advertised to use a 3/4-16 thread pitch filter. However its very close but it doesn't fit. The outer diameter of their adapter is 2mm larger than an actual 3/4-16 thread. So all the filters I've tried do not thread on and its fairly loose threading onto the engine. Needless to say I won't be using it as it is. Also lol at the spelling on the box.
    I've reached out to the seller, who's in disbelief that this could ever happen as they've been selling it for 6 years blah blah blah. I've asked for a refund but no dice.

    IMG_2092 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    made a bracket for the washer bottles

    IMG_2093 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    they fit nicely where I had planned in the drivers side cubby

    put my big boy pants on and tried welding the gussets by myself best I could

    IMG_2094 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2095 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    They kinda make the gaps between the cage and chassis bigger than they are, this is because I went to the middle of the bar in an effort to make the logo a legible size. I think they'll look better black after paint, kinda hoping the windshield doesn't cover them.

    IMG_2096 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    might have to back them with white or something if I want them to stand out.

    So with the wiring mostly done, the fuel lines worked out, and the majority of the welding in the interior done the next logical thing to do was drop the engine in.
    Now because I have to push this thing in and out of the garage to work on it, once the weight of the engine and trans was added I wouldn't be able to do so on my own.

    IMG_2142 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    goal was to start with this on friday evening, and have a running car by saturday night.

    had a few things to finish once the engine was in though

    IMG_2145 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    made a crossmember, this car was an automatic and the transmission crossmember I had from before (grannies) was for a manual which does not fit. not 100% sure on my driveline angles, and it may bump the steering rack as it sits but I'll modify as needed. For now its clears everything including the speedo cable and leaves ample room for an exhaust.

    IMG_2146 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    primed

    IMG_2148 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    gloss black. Cuz I still like gloss black things under the car

    IMG_2150 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr


    IMG_2147 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    bad pic but cut the power steering bracket to clear the oil pressure sender.

    IMG_2153 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    went and bought new braided line for the fuel lines as the old ones were too short and I had used them for the rear lines to the tank. Must say the newer Performance World line is much easier to work with then the old. I've never had one leak until now, but as they almost always are it was an assembly issue and the rubber part of the line didn't grab the hose end and blew off. The new line almost seems to have glue holding it to the rubber hose.

    IMG_2152 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2151 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Im planning on running the heater core tube so I swapped one of the hose ends here to a 90 instead of a 120.

    IMG_2156 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    with that I just plugged everything else in, realized I used an accessory off the ignition harness in place of an ignition (though its labeled ignition 2 but functions as an accessory, thanks mazda) but was otherwise good to go.

    IMG_2157 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    will probably have to make a battery box as I can't find one on the internet that will fit in this space. Also need to find the battery group that is short and not a Porsche battery.

    IMG_2158 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    with everything super temporary,and the clutch bled

    IMG_2159 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    some super ghetto improvising, it runs and drives.

    IMG_2164 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied
    Originally posted by 190Evan View Post
    All this organization looks solid. Curious as to why you wen with the ford connector that lacked pins rather than a mil spec variant? Power distribution looks great nonetheless.
    thanks. Purely cost. I already have the ford connector, Milspec is pricey, and usually smaller gauge wire.

    Originally posted by I_Haz.:R32 View Post
    I love all this detail work. These pictures are like pron for people that enjoy well organized/ thought out wiring and fabrication (like me). Keep up the great work dude!
    thanks!

    Leave a comment:


  • 190Evan
    replied
    All this organization looks solid. Curious as to why you wen with the ford connector that lacked pins rather than a mil spec variant? Power distribution looks great nonetheless.

    Leave a comment:


  • I_Haz.:R32
    replied
    I love all this detail work. These pictures are like pron for people that enjoy well organized/ thought out wiring and fabrication (like me). Keep up the great work dude!

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied
    soooooo around this time I started school. I'm an electrical apprentice and I go to school for 3 months a term (or whenever i can get in really). This meant I get to wake up late, shower, and get off after being there for 6 hours. Gives me tons of time to work on my turd

    IMG_1889_2 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Decided to tackle the bulk of the wiring during this time. Wanted background noise, but not music, movie took too much visual concentration. So started with the Maximum Driftcast, kinda interesting but like all podcasts they ramble about stuff thats fairly irrelevant. Some of the guests they have are pretty interesting though. But was more into the stand up comedy that Netflix released by the truckload recently.



    watched a lot, and I mean a lot of specials. Theres quite a few that are bad or weak at best but one of the best I watched was the two by Mike Birbiglia. Highly recommend watching.

    So I spent about a month stripping wires, labeling things, relocating things etc. Kinda changed my thoughts a bit on soldering vs crimping but we'll see how this turns out. Basically the larger gauge wires I crimped and use 3 in 1 heat shrink on and the smaller stuff I soldered and used 3 in 1 on. Also took all the factory crimp joints and covered them with heat shrink. Cuz that tape stuff is nasty

    IMG_1907 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    not a lot of visual progress here, especially for the amount of time it took

    here's mocking up for lengths and to make sure I didn't accidentally delete something I needed

    IMG_1918 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    wanted to get this down to 1 bulkhead connector instead of 2, so after a lot of planning and figuring out that all I had to do was drill the ford connector and push some plastic out in order to insert more pins in it, thats what I'm doing


    IMG_1921 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1922 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1923 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Wanted to keep the same location for the battery switch as before

    IMG_1919 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    this presented a new challenge as I wanted to keep the fresh air vents and the blower fan

    IMG_1962 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1920 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1963 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    makes getting the blower fan and power wires a serious task but really I shouldn't have to take it out ever

    worked on placement of the bulkhead connectors.
    IMG_1924 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    one day I would love to do a full mil spec/raychem/fancy harness so I'm leaving enough room for an aluminum plate should I find and buy a mil spec connector. Was trying to find one on eBay, mated pairs come up but man you can't hesitate on it when you find one.

    IMG_1925 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Ecu and remote TFI fit nicely where the RX7 ecu went. Not sure how the remote TFI will do being in the interior and under a cover. Seen a few mustang guys put them in their interior but can't find any real data whether it gets too hot or not.

    Now I had a few goals for the fuse panel. I wanted in removable from the car, and more serviceable, and to retain my glovebox. Where I had it before was kinda hard to get at, and not nearly as tidy as I had hoped it would be.

    IMG_1927 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1928 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1929 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    space I had was again very limited and awkwardly shaped.

    IMG_1959 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1961 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1958 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1960 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr



    played with some ideas until I had something I thought could work.


    then back to the lab again

    IMG_1943 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1944 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    used all the old stuff from the previous 2 cars and had the blue cars unmolested harness in the other room as a reference tool. I like using factory colours and the pins.

    IMG_1982 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1985 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    got my engine harness sorted, its also quite modular and not 1 piece with the body harness like last time. Vast improvement and important for when I no longer have a v8.

    I don't even want to talk about how many times I had to go back to the parts store for consumables, or how much all that nickel and dimming added up to, but started here

    IMG_2010 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    experimented with a label maker and clear heat shrink. Those 3M heat shrink labels are cool and all but that printer is out of my budget

    IMG_2013 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2014 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    figured out quickly what I can and can't do this way, order of the process was very important.

    IMG_2015 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    the only piece i'm reusing from this is the bottom piece, and well the hinge too. The front piece I need to be CNC cut (I did a quick and nasty cut just to be able to build this) and the upright piece is a touch short. Also planning on doing something black on the bottom of it, like carpet or abs.

    then to this

    IMG_2024 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2025 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    bought a Weatherpak connector in a large enough gauge for the ignition wires and fan wires. Not very sold on it, was supposed to be crimp but after trying it I added solder just to be on the safe side. I wish there was an ideal connector in the rx7 harness cuz I don't yet trust this.

    IMG_2071 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    had done some work for my old boss, a marine mechanic, a long time ago and finally banked that favour


    IMG_2045 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    and done mostly

    IMG_2075 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2074 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_2073 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    need to deal with this though...

    IMG_2073 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    leave you with a small pro tip: when I would go to re organize or add heat shrink to a wire I would wrap tape around the connector and mark the location of it before I removed it. do one at a time. pictures of the connector are also good, maybe a tad slower though and sometimes hard to get the trace in the shot. having a complete harness in the next room was a huge help for this

    IMG_2037 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied
    Well I've only been putting off updating this for a few months now. In a way its not a bad thing because it means I've been super busy working on the car.



    Got Spotify and have been listening to basically everything. I think Kendrick's new album Damn was the first album I downloaded. Worth it too.



    Where I last left off was welding the tubs in

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Had to grind the rust off

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    basically took most of the primer off the tube front


    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    making sure them gaps are tiiiiiight

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    and sanded and prepped

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    and voila

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr


    Made a mount for the brake reservoirs, started with it just welded on but lol I couldn't get the heater core in or out, so had to change that to a bolt on version.

    Untitled by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    ended up trimming the heater core/mixer quite a bit. Will have to hold down the flap for the centre vents, disconnected the rod for them as well. planning to put gauges where those were anyway

    next up was the brake lines, same drill as before but even more hidden

    IMG_1842 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1843 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1845 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1846_2 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    New challenges with there now being a heater core and such to compete with for space.

    IMG_1847 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1848_2 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    this stupid fitting was like $18 but it was the best way to do this. One of those things where they know they have you, if you are buying this fitting its the only one that will work.

    boom rear brake line done

    IMG_1913 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    made another bracket for the bulkhead connectors for the flex lines to the masters.

    IMG_1849 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    bought a few new fittings for the hydro, a bulkhead T and such. Neat things those are

    IMG_1863 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    bent up more lines

    IMG_1867 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    found it easier to stack 2 nuts and weld them together and then weld them to the car. last time I cut down bolts, but those were a pain to make and if I didn't use one it poked a hole. Also using my line lock solenoid to lock out the rear brakes from being functional instead of holding pressure on the front. I no longer care about being NHRA compliant (not like my local track actually checks or is capable of properly reading the rule book anyway), and want to so sick brake stands/bagel/burnies/rollers.

    IMG_1869 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    mocked up with the pedals in place (cut the dash to fit somewhere in there before)

    IMG_1870 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    then moved onto the hydro, started with these brackets and more bulkhead fittings

    IMG_1871_2 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1872 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    because I'm on car #3 I have a bunch of things I've kept, like the clips that hold the rear brake lines

    IMG_1877 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    aaaaand yet another fit check. close but hits the wheel on top of the rear wheel well first, and the trailing arm on the the body before. Hoping it never gets this close though..

    bought some more small things

    IMG_1864 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    IMG_1865 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    the pins and hiems I'll use later for the tube front but the seat belt bolts...

    IMG_1879 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    this is going to be much easier and stronger than last time

    IMG_1880_2 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    drilled some holes, grinded for welding

    IMG_1883 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    the two in the rear are for the seat mounts, going to use a very similar bracket to what I had in the blue car. I've seen a couple FC's (most notably Jeremy Lowe's) that mount their seats like this in order to sit the seat as low as possible. Passenger side I'll be using the factory mounts.

    IMG_1884 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    took a few min to delete the antenna hole

    IMG_1886 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    and just for the giggles, and much to my surprise the rear view mirror fits and works. I was expecting it to be blocked but the roll bar if it did fit but its all good

    IMG_1912 by Tyson Floris, on Flickr

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied
    Originally posted by DonaldG View Post
    Great reads at work. Looking forward to using this as a guide for my build
    thanks!
    and lol grain of salt. not everything I do is perfect

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied
    Mini update!

    Untitled

    decided to test fit my subframe before I welded in the flat floor of the cubbies, and surprise surprise toe arms still hit the floor.


    started from here

    Untitled

    and with the flare on

    Untitled

    now this is only a 215/40r17 so in the long run this might have been ok when I have an 18" on. But it could also hit hard or something and still interfere.

    soon out came the grinder

    Untitled

    Untitled

    Untitled

    (bad pic I know)

    and that got me to this

    Untitled

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    just for the lols I grabbed a skirt and threw it on

    Untitled

    HA! the wheel is higher than the skirt, higher than the frame rail even

    Untitled

    If I ever get bored and want to try an air ride setup, I guess I can lay frame.

    even better is this:

    Untitled

    The inner car nerd is thrilled that after quick measurements my camber gain is like 3" over 8.5" of travel, and it will never use 8.5" of travel. I haven't put those white line bushings in yet either, or the parts shop spherical's yet but no binding and ideal camber.

    but now of course I have holes in the floor. Looked around the shop and found some leftover pieces from building my exhaust, they seem to do the job and look cool in a kind of lowrider frame notch kinda way.

    Untitled

    Untitled

    tacked in place, and fit checked once more

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    kinda forgot to take photos after this as i was running out of time and getting stressed. Kinda over using a grinder lol

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    but it's all done and primed now.

    Fully stoked on this picture though, i think I need Kiwami's

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    can't wait to start destroying axles from stretching them

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  • DonaldG
    replied
    Great reads at work. Looking forward to using this as a guide for my build

    Leave a comment:


  • Teeson1111
    replied
    well true to my vague word, here we are months later and I've finally found time to update this ole thing.



    Been listening to a lot of stuff but keeping it to one or two more recent albums. Snak Tha Ripper Just Giver, a local guy (well to me) but I believe he's more well known than just the lower mainland. A mix of non serious rap and the real stuff (I like the real stuff in general but both are good on this).
    And for something completely on the other side of the spectrum



    John Mayer's latest; The Search For Everything. Been a fan of his for a long time, since sometime in high school. lol was hassled then and still am today but I don't really care. Dude is hands down one if not the best guitarist in the world, I say this after seeing him when he came to town a week ago. Show was great and each ticket came with a copy of the album.

    Life's been whack lately, between family stuff, Nissanfest, starting school (well trades school sooooo) and general busyness it feels like I never get more than a few hours to work on the car but thats not really true. Thats just how it feels lol. Probably has more to do with how slowly stuff is going, but as they say double your timeline and double your budget. Doing things how I want them done means me doing it twice sometimes.

    IMG_1551

    Been stripping my wiring harnesses of loom so I can start piecing it all together, found that Netflix added Monster Garage and chose to start watching that. Made it through 1 episode and remembered why I can't stand Jesse James and proceeded to watch other things instead.

    IMG_1558

    After almost a month delay UPS finally gave me my package from Parts Shop Max. Last time I ship with UPS ever. Some of the worst customer service experience I've ever received. Don't ship with them especially if crossing the border.

    Got a set of spacers that also fit the daily driver toyota and their spherical conversion kit for the rear trailing arms. Now I've read and been told that because I have solid everything else and poly trailing arm bushings that this would cause binding. Can't say i've experienced this but most of the time I think the trailing arms bottom out on the chassis before they could articulate so much that they could bind. New chassis the body isn't in the way so I figured I'll solve it before its an issue and order the last piece for the rear subframe that they sell that I don't have.

    IMG_1601

    stackable spacers are sick too btw

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    spent a few minutes on the front end with the tie rods disconnected just to make sure I had ample clearance from things before I did the rear tubs.

    IMG_1586

    IMG_1587

    you can see where some cutting needs to happen

    IMG_1588

    the front however, the tub sits perfectly as I planned. Tire would hit the frame rail before the tub.

    Then pushed it outside to where we usually park the farm truck so me and my dad could start on a new wood shack/car thing where I usually park the car. However it rained, no monsoon-ed for like 2 days and flooded the back yard and I ended up pulling it out of about 6 inches of water. not amused.

    IMG_1604

    after much thought and consideration for use of space, I came up with these for the rear tubs.

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    start with stock, well minus hammer marks. (was making sure the intrusion bars didn't fowl wheel clearance)


    IMG_1629

    filled in the holes while it was easier

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    then the majority of it

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    then welded and grinded

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    IMG_1605

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    repeat for other side. hoping this looks oem when its filled and painted. it allows for me to have wiring and or catch cans etc in the space, doing anything else would have taken up so much room.

    RDSI4456

    Bought one of these, was really looking forward to this project. I think what Nate and the guys with Villains are doing is amazing, good for drifting in the PNW but also for drifting in general. Since buying one the project hit full funding and Paypal didn't hold up their end. You can read more about it on Villains Sportsland Facebook page. After having a good conversation with Nate at Nissanfest about it Im still hopeful this will happen, though it may not be until 2018.


    anyway back me making more work for myself

    IMG_1632

    besides how rusty it looks (though it does come off pretty easy) I did not like how it looked. Went to the Vancouver Auto Show and me and my buddies must have spent like 45 min just looking at Brody Goble's Pro2 s14.5 build. His fabricator does great work and with lots of clever details. I went to the shop the next day with the ambition to step my game up. I want this car to look like it came out of a shop, not a hobby garage. That said not a FD car but close to that level of build quality I can get to within reason.

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    so cut that out. Didn't like how the mount plate sat on top of the tube, didn't look clean and I can't do pretty welds so would rather them sit more flush on the tube instead.

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    remade the plate, cut more of the tube out and tacked in place

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    shape aside it maintains the amount of material (if not more) than the wall the tube would have if it wasn't cut. I am mildly concerned in the event of a crash the tube will behave different than the crash testing but my thinking is that it will fold after the bend anyway.

    IMG_1641

    and done one side

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    and both. much better. OCD satisfied for now

    IMG_1643

    while I had the welder going I put a captive nut on a plate for a ground wire from the engine. May re do this, but its pretty low down and functional.

    got some primer from the body shop my sister worked at

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    IMG_1656

    and set up for doing some primer. finally everything won't rust on me

    start with wire wheel

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    sand with 260

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    give it 2 layers of primer

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    as it turns out, this is fairly time consuming. And I have to allow for drying time at the end of it before I put it back outside in whats usually rain.

    so still putting the car outside under a tarp

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    but me and my dad are working on making that better. 2 parts firewood storage and 1 part shelter for my car. Once we're done building it and framing in the sides I'm planning to frame a door and completely enclose where my car is. When we measured it out I planned for enough room to build a tire rack in front of the car and some small shelves etc. But as I've learned thrifty ways from my dad, we are trying to find as much used wood and roofing etc off CL and save money where we can there.

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    spent a few minutes with my radiator and fans, did some trimming and hole saw action

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    need to get some PVC pipe to finish the shroud. but fits just so.

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    Took the missile out for its last hurrah before I disassembled it completely.

    Friend was having a private day up at Penticton and I managed to snag a spot out of 5 cars. Paid for the event thinking "missiles fine, haven't touched it since october but it ran when I jumped it last"

    well...

    IMG_1675

    needless to say we had a rough winter and I forgot to drain the coolant or put antifreeze in it. Not 100% sure where the coolant and oil are mixing but my best guess is the front iron cracked. This was after the car was loaded on the trailer and we were otherwise set to leave early the next morning. So I threw new oil in, (didn't help) some lucas stabilizer and put premix in the tank hoping to limp it through the day.

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    needless to say it made it, though down on power and smoking like it was on fire (apparently shot fire balls too). Managed to get my girlfriend in a drift car. Told her "I'll take it easy and you can get used to it". kinda did that for the first pass. 2nd pass I threw in almost 2 fast and closer to the wall then I had all day. But she wasn't phased and stayed in until we both felt sick from burning engine. Brought a buddy along to let him have a chance to do some donuts and experience drifting and well basically get him hooked on it before he does something like autoX or track racing haha.
    Spent some time playing with front suspension settings and alignment settings. Private days are great for this cuz you have so much track time. I'll get into more of it later


    IMG_1691

    was super surprised by how long it lasted, especially since I was not being nice to it, as I didn't really have much to lose if the engine did go. Ended up being a long day though, its about 4 hours to get to the track, then we detoured on the way home and hit snow at the summit of the Coquihalla on the way home. Left at 7 am, home at 2:30 am.

    So the next weekend after that, we headed up to Nissan Fest. was thinking "ya this will be a nice chill weekend, Im not driving or drifting. maybe change some tires for the guys and get some ride alongs"

    IMG_1722

    nope.

    Krew Chief Keil's Allison blew up about 10 minutes from the border. So we pulled it off the hwy with Pete's LS powered 240, and I got a ride to the border and walked across to get another ride to get my dads truck. Ended up towing the trailer and all the tires for the team. worked out because my dads truck and kris' is the same except his is a diesel. But was a fun weekend, weather was all over the place. Everybody practiced in the dry and our guys got in a groove, then we had a lunch break where it rained hard for an hour then cleared up in time for the competition. But it was 100% different than practice and was super slippery. Kudos to the guys that won though, they had it pretty figured out by the end of the comp and put down some clean runs even for how wet and inconsistent it was.
    Then one of our cars (lol not one of the drift cars but he did drift in the open drift after the comp) broke like 20 minutes down the high way leaving the track so we loaded him on the trailer and dragged it eventually all the way home.

    Fun weekend, however not was I expecting at all but when is it ever.

    Started tearing the missile down and found things I wasn't expecting

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    I always had this idea that I would one day build this car into the new drift car, but the roll happened much sooner than I was ready for and the accident with this car also happened unexpectedly and too soon. I always thought it was the cleanest of the 3 i've owned but turns out its the worst.

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    The usual areas I see rust on S4's there wasn't any but the passenger rocker was baaaaaaddd

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    so ripped the interior and windshield out. I plan on keeping a large amount of the parts from this car. The interior while blue was in great shape and when I go to die a dash black again I wanted matching colours so starting with the same colour dash pieces. The suspension is also full of parts from the drift car anyway, and having spares of some stuff aint a bad thing.

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    got these up around black friday (shoutout to Neil @ SCG, he's a dealer btw and I think the only Canadian dealer), they are 18x9.5 instead of the 17x9 I have currently. I think I want 18" up front but if they don't fit or clear etc I will likely use them as rears.
    I was hiding these in my basement so they would be clean and mark free when I went to use them but my daily was lacking cool wheels (and I corded the tires on the CR-Kai's drifting). Picked up a set of tires cheap off a buddy in Kelowna while I was out that way (thanks again Caetano!)

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    had my bud Pete (same dude with the LS 240) put them on for me and before they went on the mark 2 I test fit them on the missile.

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    IMG_1761

    at its current more function oriented ride height they clear everything with no spacer needed. Even the fenders on, they are pulled probably 15-20mm more than rolled flat I'd guess. Keep in mind that this is with the Villains angle kit (40mm ball joint spacer) and a bit of hammering and removal of the brake line mount, also around 7* of camber.

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    even a bit of room between it on the fender.

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    however once I got it sitting more like it should the wheel and the spring touch so I need around a 10mm spacer but I used a 15 cuz thats what I have and it still fits.

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    sitting the car on the ground it actually sits higher than I thought. Switching from a 215/40r18 to maybe a 235/30 or similar might help. or 17", don't know yet.

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    real issue is going to be this, but I had the same one with 17" wheels as well. Its not a lot of suspension travel.

    When I was at the track I was advised by a new friend Garrett to try adding caster. I tried castor on the old V8 car and it felt terrible and smacked the wheel around. Now that was probably due to the weird geometry that giant rack spacers give at angle on stock ackerman knuckles. Now that the car has 0 ackerman it doesn't self steer very much and as a result its very twitchy and I had to be steering ahead kinda guessing where the wheel needed to be. This was a great way to learn where it should be but man is it hard to be smooth and precise. so at the track I added a bit of caster by maintaining camber and rotating to the middle position on the PSM top plate.
    Car drove much better the rest of the day, I wish I tried it sooner and had a chance to try it with even more caster added.

    The other thing I noticed test fitting the 1552's is that the knuckle no longer hits the tie rod into the ball joint/control arm. The rack now stops before anything hits, much to my surprise. Seems like a lot of change for like 2 or 3 degrees caster, but am doing a bunch of reading on steering geometry to figure out if something else also changes.

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    as I type I plan to take the missile to its new scrap metal yard home tomorrow. sad day for sure. Looking forward to having 1 project car and having the parts I need to test fit accordingly.

    till next time heres the Mark2 at Serial Nines block party blocking SCG's cars hehe

    IMG_1776
    Last edited by Teeson1111; 05-02-2017, 08:02 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Skervey
    replied
    Love checking out your build! Gets me so pumped on my car even though im not going to be drifting anytime soon.

    Keep it up and and keep us up to date!

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