Webmaster's Blog - More setbacks

Skye Skye Nott
Skye Nott Webmaster can  
Vancouver, BC, Canada

Total Posts: 96 Latest Post: 2011-04-28 13:34:09
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Link to this journal: http://www.mgexperience.net/journal/Skye






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More setbacks

Skye Nott Webmaster can — Posted on The MG Experience
Friday August 1, 2003 12:00 AM
The new estimate from the body guy is the car will be finished and painted by Jan 1. I should have my rally car and street car finished by then, so I should be able to put it together fairly quickly once I get it back. But its been so long I hope I can remember where all these parts go. Good thing I put all the nuts/bolts/little bits in ziplocks and labelled them during disassembly!



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Back on track

Skye Nott Webmaster can — Posted on The MG Experience
Thursday April 3, 2003 12:00 AM
Floors are welded back in, and so is the new trunk floor. Right now the trumpet sections under the front fenders are being reworked. The pace is starting to pick back up, I'll get some new pictures as soon as I can.



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No news..

Skye Nott Webmaster can — Posted on The MG Experience
Thursday February 27, 2003 12:00 AM
Not a lot of progress to report I'm afraid. I'm not one to sit idle though, so while I've been waiting for the MGB bodywork and paint to be finished, I've been working hard on building a rally car!



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Back from the Sandblaster

Skye Nott Webmaster can — Posted on The MG Experience
Sunday December 15, 2002 12:00 AM
No regrets! That's become the philosphy of this restoration. Since Joe has access to some great donor shells, we're leaving no "while we're at it" left undone. The end result will be a car at least as good if not better than when it rolled out of the factory at Abingdon in 1965. <br><br> Unfortunately, all the previous work that was done by Bryce Mack in White Rock BC has turned out to be done so poorly as to be incompetent at best, and a serious safety issue. As such I would like to publicly apologize to anyone that used his services based on my recommendation. Check out especially the pictures of the trumpet sections, doglegs, rear sills and floor pans. The metal that the new pieces were welded to previously were either too deteriorated, not cleaned properly or not welded well, so they're all being redone - that's the sound of many thousands of dollars being flushed down the toilet! Live and learn, I guess. A lot of the welds you can pop apart with a screwdriver, as Joe keeps telling me "it's a good thing you weren't in an accident with it like this". Over the last year I have been contacted by several other people that have had the same experience - after getting the car back it was one of the worst repair jobs they had ever seen - some have been able to get partial refunds, but I have not pursued that option yet. <br><br> One of these customers who had poor work done on his MG wrote an article on his experience which is currently being distributed to all MG clubs in North America. He emailed it to me and asked me to post it on my site. It is titled An MG Too Far and you can read it by clicking on the link. <br><br> The sandblasted shell is really lovely and makes for a good starting point to build up the car RIGHT. You'll also notice that the engine bay is shiny compared to the rest of the car, it's already had a coat of POR-15 laid down. Extensive anti-rust treatment will be applied to the car as it comes back together. <br><br> With the new "might as well" fabrication, deciding to go over all the welding, and a few other odds and ends (like filling in the 6x9 speaker holes), the revised start-painting date is Feb 1st. Suprisingly, the additional cost is not that much - NOW is the time to do these things, when the car is 100% apart and bare metal. Joe has built a paint booth at the back of the shop and the results on the "test car", which was done in black, look superb.


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Gauge Renovation

Skye Nott Webmaster can — Posted on The MG Experience
Sunday October 20, 2002 12:00 AM
Not much else to do, so I'm starting work on the dash. The only gauge I hadn't renovated was the dual coolant temperature &amp; oil pressure gauge because you have to disconnect the oil and water lines to draw the back of the gauge off. Now that the dash is out of the car though, it was easy. Three small screws each hold the separate gauge mechanisms to the side of the housing. I can then be very carefully drawn away. Then I masked off the housing and painted the inside high gloss white, like I had done to the rest of my gauges. After this treatment the night visibility of the gauges is way better (ie readable). I discarded the translucent blue filter ring for the same reason, since the blue can be easily reproduced by painting the instrument bulbs. After assembly, I calibrated the temperature readings - click on the pictures for details.


Pretty bad picture but you can see the two notche

Pretty bad picture, but you can see the two notches #1 and #2 where the small "hook" from the faceplate can go. Obviously changing the orientation of the faceplate will affect the readings so its pretty important to get it lined up properly. I couldn't

Fluke temperature probe and MG temp sender suspend

Fluke temperature probe and MG temp sender suspended in heated water for calibration. The hardest part was getting a steady temperature with the stove. Not suprisingly, the gauge wasn't terribly accurate along its entire scale (that is, the error was not




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Autumn Cleaning

Skye Nott Webmaster can — Posted on The MG Experience
Tuesday September 24, 2002 12:00 AM
I'm cleaning the cobwebs out of all the corners of this web site, and converting all the pages to my new snazzy format. The end results is, I'm getting rid of a lot of bad links, reorganizing things more logically, and renaming everything consistently. As an added bonus, with all the automation I'm adding (CSS and PHP for you techies out there), it will be much easier for me to add new articles and control the look &amp; feel in the future. I've already added some new articles, look for "Changing Wheels" below, and I've also added a bunch of performance data to the "MGB Specification" page. Also, the BBS will soon be about 100x faster when loading after I switch to the new server hardware. I've got some big plans for this site over the Fall and Winter, so stay tuned!



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