"Building in Style"

"Building in Style"
Donations for the REAL Smyth shirt are accepted lol

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Day 23 ~ Shifter box continued

     I got my necessary hardware from the store yesterday, so I'm back in business. The bolts I had were about 30mm long. A 20mm would work, but since they nylon lock nut and an extra washer (provided but not pictured) was used, I went with my 25mm ones. This gave me the needed clearance and kept me from having to turn the nut for all that extra thread. I also took some painstaking time getting the thread rod length adjusted just right.
Supplied bolts are a bit long

At last it doesn't touch any part of the box at any position. Hopefully that will pay off and prevent any future issues. It's really a neat setup with the bell crank reversal. I've seen pics and am wondering if I should add an extra guard underneath to keep any stray rocks, sticks, or other debris from contacting the shifter assembly. I'll let you know what I come up with.

My 25 mm bolts work perfectly now. This is just for reference.
You can see my washer/spacer config is a little different from Smyth, but yours may work perfectly in one or the other.
The important thing is to make sure you have good clearance and smooth operation through the full range.
Take your time with this. It's not something you want to have to redo at the end of the project.
Also, the cover plate only takes a nibble with some tin snips to get a good seal and fit between the bell crank supports.
     Also, the big metal bracket plate Smyth provides, like the windshield frame, is untreated steel. I saw from the pics that he had painted or coated his, so I decided to spray mine with some rubberized undercoating. I bought that can when I had a Jeep in college with some bumper damage from trying to off-road through a small tree that had grown up in one of the trails. It worked great to cover the paint scraping, and its thick texture hid the dimples from my hammering it back into shape. That was probably 12-14 years ago, so I'm surprised the stuff in the can was any good. The spray nozzle was plugged a bit, so I couldn't get a good pattern. I just sprayed it on thick and let it run. Who cares right? It's just there to keep the rust and rocks away underneath the car.
Not a great paint job. Function is adequate underneath though.
RIGHT: Illusion...it's not that big really, just hanging on a garage door rail.
= )

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Day 22 ~ Door cuts, brake line replaced, shifter box work

     Smyth recommends using a circular saw (with metal-cutting blade of course) for the door cuts. This is extremely handy. I probably could think of a few other areas it would have made life so much easier than the reciprocating saw, but especially the doors. It's definitely a lot more dangerous of a tool if it gets caught and you lose control, but proper use and situation awareness can prevent accidents. Other recommendations I'll add are to cut these with the doors installed so they're their own stabilizer, and make sure you have room enough to open the doors fully. That area near the front of the door is the hardest part with all the extra layers, and whatever you can't reach easily with the circular saw, you'll need to finish with the reciprocating saw (which is more tricky and time consuming). It took me a while to finish marking the lines between the dimensions I'd already measured and marked, so between that, the cutting, and a little cleanup, I burned about an hour and a half on the doors.
     Since I had an extra pair of rear brake lines laying on the G3F from another Jetta body, I decided it was time to install that so it wouldn't get bent or damaged just being in my way. If you remember, I had cut the line going to the right rear wheel when I made my rear seat area cut. See notes on that to avoid the same mistake. Otherwise it's likely to cost you more than I because you probably won't have an extra Jetta body sitting there for spare parts.
     Next I unbolted the original shifter box assembly (2 (10mm) nuts in front on top, 2 bolts underneath and to the rear). I gently used some groove joint pliers ("channel locks") to remove the bottom cover by prying each tab. I'd like to keep it in tact to re-install as a dust cover. I think I'll only need to trim the front corners, and drill a drain hole to make it work with the modified box. Getting all the parts sorted out and put together took a lot of time and trial-and-error from the pictures in the build manual. Let me just note here that you really need to peruse the manual by major sections, not step by step. There's a lot of good tips and necessary steps that come later on in the section. If you try to replicate the picture and progress of the first few steps, you'll be ahead of yourself, and will likely have to redo some things based on the notes to follow. Also, I had quite a time with clearances. The end result will work the same, and looks close, but has a couple washers used as spacers in a different area than the one in the manual. NOTE: When you drill out the ball-end on the longer shifter box thread rod, use at least a 9/32" drill bit. A 1/4" will fit over the post tightly and will bind in a Reverse, 1st, or 2nd gear position. I also used a round file to just widen the hole a tiny bit in that direction. NOTE: Also, when you get your hardware, check the length. If it's over 1" long, you'll be better off getting a couple shorter ones as clearances get pretty tight, and there was a ton of thread left out the end from 1/4" to 1/2". I will update the measurements after my trip to Lowe's either tomorrow or Monday. Hopefully, my feedback to Smyth on the different hardware sent vs. pictured will keep you from having anything but the right size anyway. That's what beta is all about ;) working out the little stuff on production.
     Well that's about it for today. I'd have put some pics in, but my camera app is misbehaving lately, crashing and rebooting my device, so I'll get some from another source soon. Have a great day, and thanx for reading! = )

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Day 21 ~ Reinstall doors & mark for cuts

  Title pretty much sums it up. Other than a few miscellaneous things, installing the doors, and following the manual for marking those cuts is really all I got to tonight. Just trying to keep doing something even though I only had an hour today... I'm getting ready for a big weekend, so stay tuned. :)

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Day 20 ~ Rear tie rods

Another short evening, but I'm itching to get back to work on this baby. I got a box of parts in from Smyth Performance recently which included some miscellaneous hardware that I had been missing and also the shifter kit! This will allow me to do gobs more on the project. I was at a halt on a few areas like the wiring harness extension, fuel-cell and battery box assembly, and "plumbing." I didn't want to run all the front-to-rear hoses and wire without having the shifter kit installed as I would then just have to remove it to give myself working space there in the channel.
   Anyway, tonight I laid out all my parts to get ready to tackle the shifter kit assembly this weekend. That's the big goal, but I'd really like to finish up the last bit of wiring harness extension also. If time is on my side, and I get really zealous, I'll assemble the front hardware for the fuel cell and battery box, do the cut at the base of the windshield frame (dash trough front area), and install the windshield frame. But let's not set the bar too high just yet. It's been a really long time since I've had the opportunity to put my nose to the grindstone here.
   Tonight's work, other than layout and re-familiarization was limited to getting the tie rods removed from my extra power steering assembly, and installing them on the rear subframe. I finally got Evernote installed and synchronized yesterday. Now I can see the latest and greatest notes on everything that's been shared with me so far on the build manual. Mark recommends buying the tie rod parts on ebay, and it's actually not a bad deal. He said $130 or so, but I saw them for $95 w/FREE shipping. I almost bought them anyway, but I have an extra front end or two from my collection of Jetta parts I've been acquiring lately, so I couldn't put some good tie rods to waste. From the pictures, I finally figured out (don't know why I was dense to it before) how to remove the tie rods from the power steering piston rod. Having had a difficult time removing these, let me suggest that if you're also not buying new ones, break the tie rods free before removing the power steering assembly from the K-frame. Having it bolted onto something or in a vise is the way to go with this. It was pretty simple to do as far as complexity, but it was difficult in a few time-eating ways. I don't know if you're reading this, Smyth Performance, but I'm going to make a small beta-suggestion on the subframe. Where the tie rod bolts to the powder-coated frame, the hole was almost perfectly sized, but a tad tight. I had to run a tap through it to get the tie rod stud to pass through. Maybe on some future frames, have it reamed out a couple thousandths (or laser cut a smidge bigger). Not a big deal, just some feedback that may help someone out later on.
   I decided to call it quits early so I could blog and get to bed. It feels good to get back to work out there. This last weekend I had wanted to get some things done on the G3F, but over the winter, my garage shrank, and spring cleaning was obviously necessary. Now I have tons of room to work. Fabulous!