Friday, November 26, 2010
First Engine Crank – 1 Hour
The original plan was to start the engine at Thanks Giving, unfortunately work has got in the way, really cannot complain, after all its work that pays for this car.
With the engine and dash wiring complete it was time to crank the engine over, first the clutch neutral tested for functionality and the area around the engine bay was checked for loose wires and other debris. As you can see from the video, the test went to plan.
The new engine start date is December 23rd, a fitting date as this will be 1 year since the car was delivered. This leaves plenty of time to mount the FAST EFI computer, hook up the fuel line, and add a charcoal filter.
Please enjoy the video, it made my Thanks Giving.
Dashboard Wiring – 5 Hours
Tried to stick with 3 main cable runs, the upper cable run consists of the gauge feed and illumination pigtails, the cable run below the 2 lower gauges is for the horn, turn and main beam dash lights, this left room for the dash harness to run at the bottom of the dashboard.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
It’s the small stuff that takes the time – 10 Hours
With the panels back from the powder coater the dash filler was permanently installed, along with the fuse panel support and the passenger foot box filler pieces.
The inertia switch was mounted to the left of the filler panel; beading was run around the dash filler to stop cable fraying.
Moving to the engine bay the O2 sensor connector was mounted to the chassis, the positive battery cable was run to the disconnect switch. The one wire alternator cable was also run to the same side of the disconnect switch via a mega fuse.
You may have noticed that all the wiring is specific to first engine start, over the next few days all engine wire will be completed (coil, starter), along with dash gauges, and ignition switch. Current plan is to at least crank the engine at Thanks Giving, with first engine start set for December 23rd, one year since the kit first arrived!
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Final Installation of Radiator – 4 Hours
Factory Five provide a length of corrugated stainless steel hose which requires cutting to length, and formed to fit. The upper hose needed bending into a simple S shape to accommodate the vertical displacement between the radiator and the billet coolant filler.
Passenger Side Header, Exhaust and O2 Sensor – 2 Hours
As with the driver’s side, the header was mounted using Stage 8 bolts and fasteners. When the exhaust was mounted and checked for parallelism to the frame and horizontal to the floor it was found that the passenger exhaust flares outwards by 1” over the length of the exhaust.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Which wire goes were! – 4 Hours
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All quality automotive vehicles have the negative connected directly to the engine, a ground cable is then run to the chassis (see October 10th post – Headers and Exhaust).
A positive cable was run from the battery post to the battery cut off switch, a 10 gauge wire was run from the alternator to a Mega fuse and then to the same terminal of the battery cut off switch. A single cable will then be run from the other side of the battery cut off switch to the large solenoid post.
Parking / Emergency Brake – 1 Hour
Some of alterations were required, a small tab on the TKO600 gearbox was cut off to clear the linkage mechanism, and similarly the mounting bracket required slight surgery to clear the ratchet. Finally the tab which operates the parking brake indicator light required filing to clear the mounting braked at full stroke.
Note: Do not pull the horse shoe pin until you have mounted the parking brake for the last time as this releases the automatic adjuster to take up slack in the system. The standard Mk3.1 emergency brake cables supplied are for a drum brake setup and so as you can see from the picture reach past the T bar. At build school the recommendation was to purchase two 94 or later cables (left / drivers) side is shorter and typically cheaper.
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