'Moose'
The
Long Wait ...
June July 1999
The
last 2 months have been so frustrating! The Trav has been away having
the stereo and security system fitted. At the same time we've had
lots of little customisations done such as fitting a new battery box
under the rear seat and adding lots of chassis strengthening to the
B-pillars. The air-con/security guy also suggested we change the original
design of anti-tramp bars from parallel arms attached to the lower
side of the axle to diagonal arms attached to the upper side. This
is so that they provide side-to-side location as well as anti-tramp
and help keep the suspension geometries correct whilst under compression.
I nodded my head knowingly and let him get on with it!. The original
idea of fitting a Watts linkage had to be abandoned due to a lack
of space under the car!
The
stereo amp fits perfectly into the seat base of the Newton Commercial
seats as if they were designed for it! The original idea of simply
fitting the front speakers into the side panels in the footwell soon
got expanded into completely new custom made speaker pods made out
of fibreglass! This allows us to have the right size box for the speakers
so they produce the best sound possible. It also means we can have
the speakers pointed more in the direction of the front seats instead
of at our feet. Rear speakers are being fitted into a new box section
under the rear seat. Again, the box has been made to make the most
of the available space and to provide the best sound possible out
of the speakers. However, since they are pointed straight at the back
of the front seats they will mostly provide only bass sound.
The
CD changer is being mounted up under the dashboard for easy access
by the passenger (visible only as the thing covered in bubble-wrap
in the photo). The head unit will be mounted in an ash wood faceplate
behind the passenger glovebox door. The head unit is a Kenwood CD
unit with the Mask feature which hides the stereo face when not in
use. The plan is to connect the on/off switch of the stereo to a micro
switch on the glovebox door, so that when the glovebox is opened the
stereo will automatically turn on. It should look quite impressive
with the faceplate rolling over as you open the door!
In
the pictures below you can see the blue brand name of the soundproofing
we're using. We're covering the entire inside of the car with Dynamat
in an effort to reduce the amount of road noise and resonance. For
stuff that is barely 2 millimetres thick and looks like self-adhesive
rubber sheets, it's expensive stuff. It's £26 per roll and we
need about 10 rolls of the stuff!
One
of our great plans is to drive across the USA coast-to-coast, so the
fitment of air-conditioning was high on our wish-list, but we were
going to leave it til later due to the cost. But we were soon told
that we have to do it now or never - there's so little room left in
the engine bay and under the dashboard that everything else really
has to be built around the air-con bits. So, we're getting air-conditioning
fitted now too. The condensor for it has to go in front of the radiator
and the fan has to go in front of that so you can imagine that space
is at a premium there - they're having to modify the front panel below
the bumper to give some more space for the condenser. It should be
hidden by the bumper valance though.
We're
having a nightmare trying to get the parts for the air-con. It's been
three weeks so far and the company making the bits (they're one-offs)
has promised several times that "you'll get them Monday morning".
But the bits never show up. They just don't seem to be interested.
Meanwhile no more work can be done to the car... Grrrrr!
Wheels
are becoming a problem too. We've got strong ideas on the type wheel
we want, but the hotrod market doesn't make any in the right size
or us. It looks like we're going to have to compromise ad go for a
modern style instead of the classic chrome steel or solid polished
alloy. We'll just have to wait and see what we end up with.
When
we started this little project it was going to be a simple engine
swap and suspension upgrade and would be in three months. Now, after
9 months it's still at least 6 weeks away from being finished. Of
course we hadn't planned on the car being sandblasted, re-floored,
re-painted, re-upholstered, alarmed, air-con'ed, and performance tuned
... we're nearly there but the waiting is so hard!