Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Working on a car 30m at a time.

It's been a while since I've done a swap, and I think I need to layout a roadmap next time.  This is my first auto-manual swap so I'll blame it on that.  I got the flywheel on (used some old MT flywheel bolts from a friends A6), and the clutch lined up and then I got my bag of AT parts and realized that the bolts for the torque convertor aren't the same as the ones for the MT pressure (In retrospect...why would they be?).  So a quick trip to the internet and Majestic Honda's website and 6 MT pressure plate bolts are on the way.

The trusty Ikea shop scale.  Dead on...ish.


 9lbs as advertized. 


 Have not used this brand before but have some drag friends that swear by them.  SFI approved and one piece design which can be resurfaced. 


I've been an Exedy guy for 20 years.  I loved the quality of their product for the price you paid.  After buying my first ACT clutch I am totally converted.  I actually bought an Exedy clutch for the wrong year (I was thinking motor year not trans year) and when it arrived it was all the parts in a box, with a piece of cardboard between the disk and pressure plate and everything else loose in the box just flying around.  The ACT kit had the pressure plate and clutch vacuum sealed and everything else in it's own plastic bag.  For slightly more it seems like a much better product just from the packaging alone.  The springs on the disk seem tighter and the whole piece just seems a step up in manufacturing.  



Saturday, December 24, 2016

It's a...been a while.

With the Africa Twin entering my garage in early summer most of the last two seasons were spent riding rather than wrenching.  That has recently changed with the advent of the first few big snows of the winter to hit in the last couple weeks.

This past week I dug into the steering rack to find that the Quaife shorter gear kit didn't fit a power steering rack.  So I need a manual rack, no biggie.  Looked into that and realized that I need a manual rear engine subframe to go with the manual rack.  F.

So now Im in the process of tracking down a rear engine subframe.


Until I find that I'll be putting the engine together with the trans next week and getting everything as ready as possible so that once the subframe/rack go in I can get the rest finished quickly!

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

The great part out.

You want parts?  I'll give you parts.

Stripping out a rusty car is a lot of fun.  You don't have to worry about leaning on the fenders, throwing tools on the roof or generally anything you would normally worry yourself with when working on a car.

Took about 10h total with a friend helping.  Good times.



Photos of parts: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B6fP58Ir8r9PSDdsVXBnMDlxeU0

Monday, February 15, 2016

6 on the floor.

I bought a manual transmission which was fortunately able to be shipped in this old beat up civic.


I brought up some RPF1s I got the weekend before and Caitlin and I drove back in whiteout conditions.  The motor is strong and the trans pretty smooth, but the car was rusted badly and the suspension had no life left in any part.  The car drove home...but it was a fight the whole way.  I'll be keeping the trans and manual parts for the swap but parting out the rest (minus the wheels).