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terrano bob
04-10-2014, 22:09
remember when you used to remove the rotor arm to stop your car from being nicked :thumbs
ballo1000
04-10-2014, 22:22
I never had to worry about that, my mini would have broken down before they reached the end of the street. I could still probably change a condensor in the dark with my eyes closed.
...I could still probably change a condensor in the dark with my eyes closed.
Oh that lovely tiny flat blade machine screw :doh
kitchenman
05-10-2014, 00:38
My ex wife figured that out and bought her own rotor arm, so I just removed the carbon brush, she got her own back by running the battery flat trying to start it:doh:doh
AlexD333
05-10-2014, 07:29
My ex wife figured that out and bought her own rotor arm, so I just removed the carbon brush, she got her own back by running the battery flat trying to start it:doh:doh
That taught you :clap :lol
And a burnt out starter :p
My first vehicle was in the 70s was an Anglia van, with a bigger engine. I fitted an ignition cut out switch under the dash. The times I'd jump in and try and start it and wonder what the F'k was wrong :doh
I never had to worry about that, my mini would have broken down before they reached the end of the street. I could still probably change a condensor in the dark with my eyes closed.
On my mini, you had to regularly fiddle with the points almost monthly, so I bought a second hand distributor, new cap, new leads, new points, new condenser, etc set it up, and scribed a line on it so that when the car broke down, I just undid the pinch bolt, and removed the old, refitted the new, lined up the scribe marks, and within 2 minutes we were on the road again.:thumb2
I also had a spare carburettor too, but never got around to setting that up...:augie
I also got "changing the bypass hose" down to a five minute job too.:thumb2
My boot was full of spares and tools, no room for anything else.:doh
Also had spare petrol, as the fuel gauge had broken too...
My first vehicle was in the 70s was an Anglia van, with a bigger engine. I fitted an ignition cut out switch under the dash. The times I'd jump in and try and start it and wonder what the F'k was wrong :doh
Did the same on my mini.:lol
Mobieus_uk
05-10-2014, 11:16
I've sofar had 2 car stolen and recoverded, trust me its a real pain in the arse when you get your car back and your lumbered with the repair bills and the real killer is that even though the insurance did not have to pay out they still treat it as a claim
ballo1000
05-10-2014, 12:01
The wife has just said she used to live in Clifton in Nottingham and used to leave the keys in her Fiat Panda 4x4 praying that obd morning it would be gone. It seems even the local car thieves weren't interested in it.
terrano bob
05-10-2014, 17:21
The wife has just said she used to live in Clifton in Nottingham and used to leave the keys in her Fiat Panda 4x4 praying that obd morning it would be gone. It seems even the local car thieves weren't interested in it.
:clap :lol:lol:lol :thumbs
AlexD333
05-10-2014, 22:03
I've sofar had 2 car stolen and recoverded, trust me its a real pain in the arse when you get your car back and your lumbered with the repair bills and the real killer is that even though the insurance did not have to pay out they still treat it as a claim
I guess if you find it, just torch it :lol
On my mini, you had to regularly fiddle with the points almost monthly, so I bought a second hand distributor, new cap, new leads, new points, new condenser, etc set it up, and scribed a line on it so that when the car broke down, I just undid the pinch bolt, and removed the old, refitted the new, lined up the scribe marks, and within 2 minutes we were on the road again.:thumb2
I also had a spare carburettor too, but never got around to setting that up...:augie
I also got "changing the bypass hose" down to a five minute job too.:thumb2
My boot was full of spares and tools, no room for anything else.:doh
Also had spare petrol, as the fuel gauge had broken too...
Funny you mentioning the points on a mini as that is how I came to own one.
It was my sister in laws car and it had been sat for a couple of weeks while she was on holiday.
She got back off her hols and it wouldn't start. My brother had a look and couldn't sus out what the problem was so they decided to scrap it and buy a car on finance.
He rang me and asked if I would tow it to the scrapyard for him as it was dead.
He basically said do what you want with it we just need it gone.
Decided to Have a tinker and the points had seized up.
Took them off, cleaned them,put them back on and bingo it lived.still had tax and test on it so I used it for over a year with no problems.
Finally swapped it for a grown up car when the Mrs got pregnant and struggled to get in and out near the end of the pregnancy.
terrano bob
05-10-2014, 23:15
Funny you mentioning the points on a mini as that is how I came to own one.
It was my sister in laws car and it had been sat for a couple of weeks while she was on holiday.
She got back off her hols and it wouldn't start. My brother had a look and couldn't sus out what the problem was so they decided to scrap it and buy a car on finance.
He rang me and asked if I would tow it to the scrapyard for him as it was dead.
He basically said do what you want with it we just need it gone.
Decided to Have a tinker and the points had seized up.
Took them off, cleaned them,put them back on and bingo it lived.still had tax and test on it so I used it for over a year with no problems.
Finally swapped it for a grown up car when the Mrs got pregnant and struggled to get in and out near the end of the pregnancy.
good old days can't do that anymore :thumbs
solarman216
05-10-2014, 23:33
well the distributor was right behind the front grill, so go, everything on the road thrown at it, simple plastic bag over it helped a lot, in those days I had a Sunbeam Talbot 2ltr long stroke engine, stuck a twin choke Weber on it went really well, memories, Rick
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