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BEAVIS 08-17-2016 03:56 AM

There's a good few hours in it, at least 16hrs or so, but I think it was worth it for the challenge.

BEAVIS 08-31-2016 02:39 AM

5 Attachment(s)
While a large majority of the underbonnet work on the car is done (well, for now), there were a couple of things that I did need to address to settle my OCD.

So, I wanted to moved the IAT sensor to read post intercooler.
The easiest way to do this was to tap into the side of the intercooler. I'm hoping that where the sensor is now mounted will give a reasonably accurate reading.
Attachment 232398

The standard GM IAT calls for a 3/8 NPT Tap....
Attachment 232399

Here's a shot down into the gizzards of the cooler. It all looks about right to me.
Attachment 232400


The other thing that needed attention was the water pump inlet pipe. It was too close to the turbo for my liking, and meant that removing the turbo would probably require removing this pipe.
So I took to it with the cutting blade on the grinder, and gave it a slight kink, just enough to get the clearance I need.
Attachment 232401

Next is to weld this back together, but I'll leave that for another day.
Attachment 232402


BEAVIS 09-12-2016 08:05 AM

4 Attachment(s)
Here's the result of my first aluminium weld attempt - welding the water pump coolant inlet pipe as mentioned in the last post.
Not great, not a disaster and not bad for a first try I guess. But, most importantly, water tight. And now it offers the extra clearance from the turbo inlet which is what I was after.
Attachment 232394
Attachment 232395

And while I was at it, I had a go at welding the BOV flange to this aluminium intake tube. This is the tube that runs between the intercooler and the throttle body.
I cut, drilled and opened up a hole in the tube to allow the flange to receive the air, then massaged it to try ensure the tube and the flange meet up reasonably close. There were a few large gaps that made welding trickier. I think the differences in thickness also made it trickier. Being a polished pipe, there's probably a heap of polishing compound in there causing contamination?
Attachment 232396

The BOV in question is a turbosmart kompact for a Nissan I believe. Although it's a 'plumback' design, I'm just going to run it open to atmosphere as pictured.
Attachment 232397



RalliartRsX 09-13-2016 11:53 PM

Why didn't you mount the IAT closer to the TB as opposed to the intercooler outlet?? Even in that short piping you could have a few degrees of temp drop

Barton 09-14-2016 12:18 AM

A couple of degrees isn't going to make much difference even if there actually is a temperature drop and not having the intake in the engine bay stops the sensor heat soaking.

BEAVIS 09-14-2016 04:39 AM

Mounting the IAT where I did was a nice, solid and convenient location, and I can route the wiring there neatly.
The key thing is to get the IAT mounted AFTER the intercooler has done it's job.
I highly doubt there will be more than a degree or 2 of air temperature difference in the 250mm of straight aluminium tube from the intercooler to the throttle body.

nitrodann 09-14-2016 07:02 AM

And the heat soak after shutdown, OMG, fuck tuning that.

Dann

RalliartRsX 09-14-2016 08:21 AM

I never really had an issue with sensor heat soak as I mounted it at the bottom of the pipe and insulated by a little rubber.

But yeah, a few degrees temp drop is not an issue.

nitrodann 09-14-2016 08:50 AM

Theres threads and threads about not putting it right before the TB.

Dann

BEAVIS 09-15-2016 08:11 AM

I actually didn't really consider it that much, my thought process was more along the lines of 'eh this seems like a good spot for it'... In hindsight, I'm happy with my intuition on this one.

BEAVIS 09-18-2016 01:47 AM

4 Attachment(s)
A couple of weeks ago I spent a weekend making these new flat carbon/fibreglass door trims to replace the previous CF ones which were too bulky for these gutted doors.
I wanted a simple flat panel, with a neat door pull and opener. The previous door trim opener was just a bit of electrician wire, and there was no door pull at all. So pretty much anything was better than what I had before.
Attachment 232390

The trim is mounted with 7 hex head M6 bolts. I riveted on these aluminium tabs and threw a rivnut in them
Attachment 232391

The interior door handle you may have noticed in the first pic is simply some aluminum tube bolted to the inner side of the exterior door handle. Pushing on the tube from inside the car will push the exterior door handle out. But, its simple and no fancy/complicated latch mechanisms required. Hand looks far too dirty for an IT nerd.
Attachment 232392

I'll finish off the top edge that meets the window with some sort of trim - haven't worked that out yet.
The door pulls were some random blue strap I had lying around. Opening the door is now as easy as pushing your thumb on the alloy tube and out the door pops.
Attachment 232393

Next thing on the to-do list is to start on sanding and painting the new fastback roof...

BEAVIS 09-26-2016 12:44 AM

In case you're not a subscriber of my channel on YouTube, or you just missed it, I have a collection of new videos coming out, here's episode 1 :)



BEAVIS 10-15-2016 09:23 PM

4 Attachment(s)
Fastback Part 1
Over the last few weekends I've been doing my least favourite thing, body work. Bleah.
Attachment 232386

The new roof needs to be sanded, holes filled, painted, windows installed, and finally mounted. I've started on the boot section first, filled all the little pinholes and imperfections.
Attachment 232387

After many hours fillling and sanding with 120grit, this is where it ended up. You may have noticed the hole right in the middle where the third brake light usually lives.
Attachment 232388

This is the quick latch mount I've gone with.... It has a socket which hooks into a bolt with a spherical end. To remove the boot I just need to push the button and the whole thing pops backwards.
It's a larger size normally for mounting things like bonnets/hoods, but a single latch in the middle here seems to work well.
These apparantly can support upwards of 80kg which should be more than enough considering the boot weighs about 5% of that.
Attachment 232389

BEAVIS 10-20-2016 07:05 AM

6 Attachment(s)
Fastback Part 2

So the roof is all ready for paint now... Main roof section is now sanded
Attachment 232380

These are the mounting points out the rear of the main roof section, riveted and epoxied on, which the boot slides onto. Its just some aluminium tube welded to a flat alloy strip. The tube slides into holes on the boot.
Attachment 232381

Attachment 232382

The whole lot back on the car for now. Looking forward to getting it all painted and some windows installed so the car is completely sealed up again.
Attachment 232383
Attachment 232384

Well there you go, ready for primer next, and some sanding and perhaps a little more filling before the paint goes on.
Attachment 232385

BEAVIS 10-26-2016 08:02 AM

11 Attachment(s)
PAINT!

So onto painting, and first off... allow me to introduce you to my makeshift paint booth:
Attachment 232369

With that I was able to get the parts primered for the first time which was a good feeling.
Attachment 232370

I then hit the whole lot with some more sanding and filled a few more imperfections.
Attachment 232371

A final coat of primer to seal it all up. Looking nice and smooth all over now and in the sun to cure well. Special mention to the supercharged NA.
Attachment 232372

Finally, colour! Looking nice and shiny in what I thought was Mazda 'Pure White'.
Attachment 232373

I had an apprentice helping out, however the bloke was pretty useless so I fired him.
Attachment 232374

After a day enjoying the sun I set the parts on the car and scratched my head as to why the colour was so off...
Attachment 232375

It would seem the bloke at the paint shop stuffed up somehow along the way. The colour was too creamy. I went back and he mixed me up another can. He thinks he may have forgotten to add some black to the mix, either that or his paint code software is off. Note the two open cans. On the left is the original colour, on the right is the new mix.
Attachment 232376

So second attempt at painting and the colour is looking better. The ladder was a good tool for standing the roof up.
Attachment 232377

A reasonably nice gloss off the gun, and some orange peel. I guess I'm reasonably satisfied with the level of peel. When I get the time I might try sand it out a bit. Anyone know if it's worth the bother? Or will I make it worse?
Attachment 232378

The end result :)
Attachment 232379

Now it needs rear quarter and rear windows, seals and some brackets to mount it to the car, then this milestone is done.
But, gonna start on the exhaust next... and come back to the windows.

miata2fast 10-26-2016 08:41 AM

You Australians can build some wicked shit.

BEAVIS 10-27-2016 06:08 AM

It's either work on cars or fight deadly crocodiles and snakes.

Girz0r 10-28-2016 04:19 PM

Just caught up on this build, excellent stuff man! You do some quality work :party:

BEAVIS 10-29-2016 07:13 AM


Originally Posted by Girz0r (Post 1370689)
Just caught up on this build, excellent stuff man! You do some quality work :party:

That's very flattering, :) I'm just another dude in his garage tryin' to make a faster miata.

There's plenty of people here that FAR surpass me in car-builder skills.

BEAVIS 11-02-2016 06:11 AM

10 Attachment(s)
Exhaust!

Well I spent the last few weekends on making up the exhaust...
Attachment 232359

Plan is to run a flex join on the end of the Nitro Dann downpipe which will then mate via a V-band to the rest of the exhaust. The exhaust itself will consist of a hotdog shortly after the V-band, and then a muffler at the rear. I would run less mufflers if I could, but noise restrictions are an issue.
I started by tacking the whole lot together with the MIG. The slip in fitment for the likes of the muffler and the v-bands make welding easier.
However, there is a huge gap around the hotdog ends which made welding those up a bit of a challenge.
Attachment 232360

Mocking up exhaust tip designs... This upturned style was one concept which got scrapped very quickly. :P
Notice however, I have angled the rear muffler upwards to make sure there is reasonable room for any rear underfloor work/diffuser.
Attachment 232361

To get the muffler where I wanted it, the boot had to go.
Attachment 232362

Saved about 3.5kg or roughly 7lbs. Not that heavy In the grand scheme of things, but every gram helps.
Attachment 232363

Fast forward a week and I spent a morning welding everything up properly. Given this is just old fashioned mild steel, I decided to paint it for a bit of added weathering/longevity. I found this white exhaust paint at the paint shop and figured it would generate some questionable looks...
Attachment 232364

Close up of one of my less sh*tty welds… Actually, lap joint of the v-band was reasonably easy to weld.
Attachment 232365

Also notice the huge fat hangers I’ve used. They are bolted to the car with round rubber bushes, much stiffer than a traditional hanger, but not completely solid. Hopefully they are sufficient to keep things sturdy yet not cause any metal fatigue type issues. I might need to cut some metal out of them, they do look a bit heavy.
Attachment 232366

And, last job was to try keep some of the heat out of the cabin/gearbox/flat floor... So I’ve wrapped it all in the DEI titanium stuff. This used up most of a 50 inch length roll (I think it was 50 inch).
I used this stuff on the last exhaust (pre-turbo 2.5” dia zorst) and it seemed to work well.
Attachment 232367
Attachment 232368

Next time I’ll hopefully get back to finishing the rest of the roof. :)


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