26th July 2015
Day 6 of ownership and all the rough bits are dealt with and I now own a really nice looking and driving car. This is the fastest turnaround of any car I've owned and one of the cheapest. From Krujoe and the ex-Chompy Rover I got these things:
- pair of headlights
- pair of under headlight trims
- 200 series hatchback spoiler (in two parts and with rusted out bolts)
- one door handle
- on interior roof handle end cap
- full set of gutter trim clips
- pair of gutter trims
- under bonnet soundproof panel
- steering wheel
- gear knob
- bonnet
- rear door small Viking badge
- passenger side electric door mirror
- driver's side manual door mirror. The casing on the SLi is different to whatever spec the electric mirror donor is.
- front driver's side indicator.
- probably something else but I can't remember what beyond a massive pile of nuts and bolts and screws and things.
Combine that lot with the pre-facelift grille (in white), early wheel trims and rear bumper I picked up from Bratfud the same day and I have everything to make the car look great. The other thing to arrive was some "Fly Eye" perforated vinyl tinting film which was a tiny fraction of the price of buying a pair of smoked rear lenses.
GAME ON.
First job was to remove the rear lights and get them all cleaned up. Someone on another forum did mention they thought this car should be on the later rear lights and I wonder if it was because behind cluster number one was this little reversed-into-a-post dent, typical giffer damage really.
Suspicions of them being the wrong type of clusters is sort of backed up by the typical Genuine Scrapyard Parts yellow marker.
Not to worry, they work and the bodywork isn't in need of anything really as you'll see later in this update. Got the lenses all cleaned and de-mossed before setting to with the Fly Eye film. This stuff is nicer to use than regular film because there's plenty of spaces for the bubbles to escape out into. It's also a good amount more flexible and can deal with tight curves and odd shapes much easier. Best of all, it doesn't reduce the light output significantly unlike a heavier conventional film tint. I'm won over by it as a tinting medium for the rear lights. £5 for this or £30 for a pair of factory smoked lenses. I know which I'd rather go for.
On the car, with the manky old bumper still fitted at this point. Really, really happy with that. Turned out better than I'd imagined it might.
With that done, Chompy appeared and we headed over to the unit in part to find out what on earth was wrong with his Xantia and so I could get the Rover properly sorted. Got the rear bumper off the car to find the brackets on my old one are in better condition than on the replacement. I did take some comparison shots and the camera appears to have eaten them. The replacement bumper brackets aren't brilliant, the lower bolts on both are sheared and I was nervous about undoing the bolts that hold the brackets to the bumper in case those shear too. Instead, I'll take the old one apart to see how to repair the new one at a later date. So, what horrors were hiding behind the old bumper then?
No horrors, it was really tidy. There's a few really minor bits on the driver's side that I want to address when I swap the bumper brackets in the future but no rot at all and plenty of paint still in good order. When clearing out the boot I found a proper giffer trinket. It's just a branch with a highly polished end and a perished rubber foot at the other, it also inexplicably has a rubber band around the top of it. This was hiding under the carpet just where you see it.
Original toolkit intact and still with stickers, probably never been used. The plastic wheel that holds the spare in place has snapped off so that will need replacing but the boot floor is otherwise pristine.
Your first look under the bonnet at my lovely kettle. Under bonnet soundproof mat courtesy of Krujoe. I'm after a few of the fixing buttons if anyone has any up for grabs, I think I need 7 in all.
Chompy also diagnosed the issue with the suspected inoperative fan. We isolated the fan and tested it to find that it was working perfectly fine but wasn't being told when to come on. There's sign of historic bodge in the sensor that goes into the radiator (which is weeping from somewhere) and it turned out this was the fault so I'll replace both. For the very short term a jumper was fitted so that the fan comes on all the time. It being Sunday I couldn't get out to grab a radiator and sensor as everywhere was shut.
