Hello,
back again - I had to go on holiday for a fortnight and then I had to go back to work, so time in the shed has been hard to come by
I've passed the one year mark(!), the evenings are drawing in and it'll soon be Winter again...I can't believe the Summer is basically over already
Anyway, enough of me depressing anybody reading this - here's the current state of play:
1. I was playing with the idea of stripping down and galvanising the rear-wheel carrier, but that would have been a mad idea, so I just sanded it and re-sprayed it.
2. Onto rebuilding the wings, then - I'd been having problems with the alarm which stemmed from voltage-drops in the wing looms - when I looked at the loom in each wing, it was no mystery why...both looms had been cut into with cr@ppy plastic joiners everywhere and the water had got into the wires and corroded them, so a great deal of cutting out bad sections and replacing them had to be done - this picture is where I was soldering a join in somewhere...
3. Here's the latest galvanised bits - from the top, they're the inner wings, transmission-tunnel flange, rear-door flange-plate, fuel-filter cover, all four mud-flap brackets, the disassembled bonnet slam-panel and supports and the wing/radiator mounting brackets.
4. The bulkhead is separate from the transmission-tunnel flange - it mounts to it using plastic captive nuts...
5. ...like this - not difficult to do, just awkward.
6. Back to the wings - they fit to the bulkhead at these four points...
7. ...I bought these improved mounting lug-nuts from YRM...
8. ...and they fit very easily.
9. The wings have diagonal slots to hang onto the bolts in these lug-nuts...or, at least, that's how i thought it would work...it turned out to be more awkward than that.
10. As you may remember, I'd stripped the wings down to get at the radiator mounting plates, which had corroded badly and had bolts irretrievably jammed in them - now I had to put the stupid things back inside the wings.
11. Putting the plates back in was a lot harder than getting them out! I had to strip the wings even further and then replace all the spot-welds with rivets, which involved a lot of adjusting (hammer) and aligning (mole-grips...and hammer).
12. You may have noticed I was working outside in natural daylight, which was an unaccustomed change! When some helicopter flew over, I took a picture of it, but had left the flash on, which it presumably didn't like as, about a minute later, it came back again and flew right over me again.
13. Wing(s) reconstructed.
14. All (mostly) galvanised bonnet slam-panel built up.
15. Ah, a problem. Things were going too well, really, and then I noticed this; one of the inner wings had warped slightly during the galvanising process...
16. ...which meant I had to elongate one of the mounting holes to compensate, although how this was going to affect the final fit was a bit of a mystery at this stage.
17. The original mounting method was the square plastic "nuts" that LR use to fit the floors in place etc. Two problems now meant that wasn't going to work anymore - firstly, the mounting holes were badly corroded and were no longer square, meaning the nuts could twist in them and, secondly, the warped inner wing required more rather more tension on the various bolts and screws to get it to fit and the plastic nuts just weren't up to the job, so I used metal J-nuts, which I now had hundreds of spare (why buy ten when you can buy 100 off ebay!)
18. This is where the alarm siren lives.
19. Right - I'm back in the shed here and about to hang the wing on the bulkhead using the engine-hoist, hence the rope. The wings have these brackets that go between the inners and outers - they're different each side, as the passenger side one has to allow for the heater air-intake, so don't mix them up.
20. Here are the wing mounting slots...but see how only three are slots and one is a hole? I had to take the top mounting-bolt out of each side of the bulkhead when I realised...
21. ...and I didn't realised until I got to this point
Hanging the wings on the remaining bolts, however, proved impossible, so I just fitted the bolts one at a time, which was very awkward indeed
22. When lowering the wing into place, I had to make sure it went the right side of the various brackets and the suspension tower...
23. Getting the inner wing anywhere near the mounting points, however, proved a significant challenge, as they say...
24. By hanging the front of the wing from the engine-hoist and jacking up the back by the bulkhead...
25. ...I managed to get the bulkhead bolts to line up...
26. ...but a new problem arose - the mounting holes in the bulkhead for the wing inner upper mounting bolts were in the wrong place, so I had to mark up new holes...
27. ...drill new holes (the bigger one)...
28. ...and fit m8 rivnuts...
29. ...which was a pain, but not the worst job I've ever had to do.
30. The bottom of the wing is secured to the bulkhead with two diagonal ties - the old ones had disintegrated when I removed the old bulkhead, so I'd bought these flash new aluminium ones from YRM...
31. ...which mount like this. You can see I've also had to reinforce the bottom of the wings with aluminium L-section, as they'd corroded quite badly.
32. There you go - that's the wings essentially on, just the front bolts and the inner-wing bolts to fit. The wings have two bolts at the front which fix them to the chassis - now, alarm bells should have been ringing at this point, as the holes didn't line up; the front of the wings were too high (by about 5cm). I thought this was just an effect of the warped inner-wings, so broke out the ratchet-straps and soon had the holes lined up! You can sort of see in this picture, though, that the wing-sides are sort of bowed out...I thought they'd settle overnight, though - optimistic soul that I am...
33. Here's the other wing - also slightly bowed.
34. Can't remember what I was trying to show here, but these are the wing mounting slots against the bulkhead.
35. It's starting to look quite Land Rover-y, isn't it?
36. You can
really see the bow in the wing here
37. I decided to ignore the bowed wings problem and fit the bonnet slam-panel, starting by bolting it in place at the bottom. It's a tight old fit between the wings, though (probably because they were a bit warped out of shape at this point - see the solution below), so I used a piece of wood and a clamp to force them apart...
38. ...and raised the slam panel into place.
39. I realised afterwards that a pair of radiator mounting plates are supposed to it between the slam-panel and the wings, but that can be done later.
40. Here's the EGR valve vacuum servo and the power-steering fluid reservoir fitted. I've actually removed the EGR valve, but apparently the ECU throws a hissy fit if you also remove the servo, so it's easier just to keep it and plug the actuating pipes.
41. More wiring - the spot-lights need a switching feed from the high-beam and dip wires - the easiest place to break into the loom is here (rather than in the wing, where it had been done before and caused all sorts of problems).
42. A nice soldered and heat-shrink sealed connection - hopefully no corrosion getting in there!
43. I'd had a good hard think about the bowed wings and the only cause I could think of was that the bulkhead wasn't in straight. Although this picture's sideways, you can see the dramatically bulging wing panel!
44. Yep, still bulging this side, too
45. The solution, then was to adjust the bulkhead. First, I took any tension caused by the wings off the bulkhead with ratchet-straps, loosened all the bulkhead mounting bolts and all the inner-wing mounting bolts...
46. ...then released the first straps and pulled the bulkhead forwards with sturdier straps (there's something similar to this on the other side)...
47. ...The bulkhead mounting brackets have slotted holes to allow a fair degree of adjustment...
48. ...and taking the inner-sill sections as my datum (as it were), I adjusted the bulkhead until it was at ninety degrees to it. I was quite pleased with the old trig method I'd used to get the bulkhead straight in the first place, but maybe I was a bit optimistic that I'd get it spot-on...oh well.
49. Now, do you remember back in history when I declared the length of the steering-shaft a mystery, as it was too short to reach between the steering-column and the steering-box? Well, mystery solved - I had the foresight to loosen this mounting clamp before moving the bulkhead and, would you believe it, it slid back to exactly the right position...in retrospect, that should have told me something at the time...oh well
50. Are you still with me? Bit of a long one, this one, isn't it? Here's the O/S wing now without a bow to it...
51. ...and the same on the N/S - hooray!
52. The inner wings were still nowhere near the mounting points, though, so before tightening up the mounting bolts that fixed them to the outer-wings, I worked my way from bolt to bolt (using a jack to persuade the inner-wing into place), fitting it to the chassis brackets. Again, these are supposed to be screws going into captive plastic nuts, but there was far too much tension on all the mounting points, so I used m8 x 20mm bolts and flanged, ridged nuts for a more secure fit...
53. ...which you can see here.
54. With that finally done, it was time to do some more wiring - the wiring behind the dash had been liberally butchered at some point in the past (not by me!), so I decided to cut, splice and solder it as required to tidy it up.
55. These are the wires from the column-switches going into the dash.
56. I don't think I've mentioned this, but I'd also decided to tidy up the additional wiring to the spot-lights, roof-lights and flood-lights etc and had got hold of a 5-relay and fuse-box off ebay, which was now wired up and mounted under the passengers seat. Halfords have started selling these neat 4-way connectors, so I used a couple to connect the switch and power wiring to the new relay/fuse-box.
57. Battery in and essential wires connected...
58. ...the odometer came to life (and the alarm, thankfully, didn't!)...
59 ...and, better still, turning the key brought the dash to life without any smoke or the engine warning light or anything particularly nasty. The fuel-pump spun up and even the heater-fan kicked into life...it's alive!...well, sort of...
I'm pretty pleased at getting the electrics working, I can tell you! I can't actually go for starting the engine, yet, though, as both the radiator and the intercooler disintegrated when I tried to clean them
Once new ones have been found, bought and fitted though, it'll be engine starting time!
Exciting stuff!
Cheerio