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Friday, June 22, 2012

Small Surgery - Brake Master Cylinder

The TVR-made brake master cylinder had begun to leak at the push-rod, and so had to be replaced. A bit surprising it would leak so soon, especially as it almost new and was not a cheap unit. It had just 400+ km on it. The original Girling m/c hadn't been great, either, the inner spring being too weak or something similar. Ah well. The new m/c is a cheaper one, as if they're all going to fail so often, then why not. I did carefully take it apart and inspected and cleaned everything, so I'm hopeful that will extend its life.

If you don't mind undoing bolts, Land Rovers are easy to work on. That overspray on the underside of the hood/bonnet is factory original, by the way (except the part on the frame, which was copied from what was originally there). The mudflaps have been superb at stopping stones and dirt from hitting the bulkhead footwell.

Just a view inside the pedal box. It would be nice if the m/c could come out without having to remove the whole box. Be even nicer if the wing didn't have to come off, too! : )


Monday, June 11, 2012

Strawberry Picking

We went strawberry picking after work today. Seriously, which vehicle would you rather go with?


In 10 years of strawberry picking, the best crop I've seen.


Very hot and humid day - and so a little stop on the way back to buy the supplies to make some ice-cold strawberry milkshakes...

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Mud Flaps

The other day, when driving downtown, I passed through a construction area that was unpaved, and then a section with fresh asphalt. The noise in the wheelwells indicated the tires were picking up a lot of stones, etc.. I then noticed that the cars that had been following me were now a lot farther behind than before. It occurred to me that perhaps the Land Rover was throwing stones and sticky asphalt particles on those following, due to the large tire treads plus the rear wheels being so exposed and close to the rear of the vehicle. Had there been pedestrians or bicyclists, they might have been effected, too. And so, I decided to install rear mudflaps on the Land Rover.

3 Bros. sent a set, from Bearmach. They also had them from Land Rover, but it was indicated that the Bearmach ones looked slightly more rugged and were stiffer, born out by their weighing more (2.28 Kg vs 2.04 Kg), plus the Bearmach ones were held together with bolts while the LR ones used plastic rivnuts. Both used coated brackets that were virtually identical.


Below, the basic Bearmach mud flap. Four 1/4" holes must be drilled into the chassis for each flap, and you must supply your own bolts for attachment to the chassis.

The bracket was held on by just a bolt, small washer and nut (bottom), and so it seemed advisable to add larger galvanized washers and lock washers (top).

Good clearance of the exhaust pipe.

The flaps installed, before adjustment. They needed adjusting because it turns out the diagonal undersurfaces of the chassis rear cross member are not "flat", they have a slight twist (you can just see this where the flap brackets are visible), and so the flaps did not hang straight down. Not helped by bolt holes in the rubber being slightly off.

Your basic Land Rover with mud flaps. Changes the "look" to some degree. Fully removeable if necessary. If off-roading, I would take them off, as they are quite long and I can see them being pulled off if reversing out of a steep-sided rut or something similar, if pinched between ground and tire.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Ramblings

I guess it might be somewhat accurate to say that the restoration is now complete - as complete as any restoration like this ever really can be. The Land Rover is being driven and enjoyed regularly. There are still some minor milestones being 'acheived' - first visit to a gas station (filled via jerry can up until now); first ride for the dog. As such, perhaps fewer entries in this blog, or rather entries that are less to do with restoration and more to do with enjoyment. But as enjoyment is the payoff of a restoration, there will be entries to be made! Plus info about repairs, improvements and the like.

Ramblings: Fort Hope, overlooking Kingston.

First gas station visit! Nice not to have to pick up that jerry can.

The dog's first ride - loved the open vents; window perfect size for sticking head out (but not too far!).

A happy dog. More rides to come.