Friday, May 24, 2013

The front spoiler DOES matter!

Adding to the list of "read about it but needed to prove it to myself":

I've seen often mentioned that the brilliant engineers at Porsche designed the whale tail & front spoiler to be used in conjunction.  My car came with the former but not the latter.  After the first flight down the highway with my new addition I've seen just how smart they are.  [at least a large part of] what I had assumed to be worn out front suspension components making my car light and a little jittery above 60-70 mph I now attribute to lift.

The addition of the spoiler has planted that front end firmly to the ground, can't wait to refresh those bushings & tie rods and feel just how perfect this car can be.

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Nose Job

Here is what I had after assembling most of the pile of parts I brought home some time ago.

And here is where I had gotten to until this last week.  I'd painted the valence with a silver that didn't really match but hated the holes left from some long gone fog-lights and a front license plate holder that I don't need and isn't going to be holding a license plate in my stewardship.  I also still had the primered side skirts and rear valences that inexplicably never got painted when the rest of the car was.


And here I am today.  There is no more primer and the silver is a close if not perfect match.  I'm not completely thrilled with the valence, I filled the holes, smoothed them and then re-applied rubber undercoat to try and match the texture that was on there before and then sprayed it.  It's a lot better but don't look too close :)

Also pictured here is my birthday present, I finally have a front spoiler to balance out the tail.

3 years later

3 years ago almost to the day I called my Dad and said "hey, you want to drive 1200 miles to Long Island, NY to pick up an old car and drag it back down here"  To which I got a big fat "sure".  That journey, including threading a car trailer back and forth through downtown Manhattan, will remain one of my favorite father/son bonding adventures and will forever be welded to this lovely beast of mine. 

Loaded up on a cool, rainy Saturday morning ready to start the long trek back to the south.


Passing through the Mid-town Tunnel into Manhattan

 Threading through Mid-Town (with a big ass car trailer) was.....interesting

And this is what we delivered home and where I started.

Thanks again Dad, I'll have to find space for more old cars in the far reaches of this great country.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Finally resolving an eyesore

On the list of things I'm a bit embarrassed to still be undone....I present to you side skirts and rear behind the wheel valences (Trav's technical term, not Ferry's) that were inexplicably left in primer when the rest of the car was painted.

I have plans to repaint the whole car but that won't come until at least next year and maybe longer (later post).


 Behold what I did today :)  It's not a half bad match for a rattle-can & clear job.

I'll do the skirts next.

Ok, so I had to doctor my magnaflow


 I mentioned I got my new muffler pretty darn cheap, that's partly because it's pipes are shall we say...compromised.  I took it to a muffler shop and just like the local auto parts store, and the alignment shop and.... I get a young gentleman that doesn't seem capable of thinking outside of his muddy monster truck shaped box.

I went to a muffler shop in town, after he agreed the muffler itself was in fine shape and the overall fit of it lookd good I asked him if they could recreate what was already there with new tubing.  "Uhhh, maeuhn, I don't know how I'd do thaut.  Maybe I could take a Camaro muffler and ........ but it'd be kinda big and may not fit so..... Maybe about $400".  To which I smiled and replied "Thanks buddy, I can get something on-line premade for this for that or less."

So I went to the autoparts store, found a muffler mending kit with metal mesh and some epoxy like substance.  I wire wheeled the whole set of pipes and then cleaned them with carb cleaner, then proceeded to patch up the holes and smooth the epoxy on.


Voila, little header/exhaust paint and it's not completely awful.  I no longer have several very loud exhaust leaks, only 2 actually where my flanges don't seem to form a tight seal even with the new gaskets I installed, need to work on that.

I'm going to take it somewhere to get the tip rerouted (had to take my rear valance at first)  And I'll not be surprised in the slightest if I humbly report back (a'la my speedo cable adventure) that my repair failed miserably but at the moment it seems to be holding.