Go Back   :::.Nissan 4x4 Owners Club.::: > General > The Clubs Virtual Pub

The Clubs Virtual Pub For general chat, so come on in and pull up a chair.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 15-08-2016, 13:19   #16
Blocky10
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Welcome to Norwich, a fine city
Vehicle: 2004 Terrano 3.0 SVE Auto
Posts: 3,601
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by terranosaurusdoug View Post
Haha, I feel very young
I found it in my grandads shed when he passed.
Blocky10 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 14:05   #17
rustic
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
rustic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Staffordshire
Vehicle: Maverick Mk I 2.7 TD LWB
Posts: 7,825
Default

Second instalment might be tonight if I can't sleep again, I am on pond cleaning duty today, the smaller pond has lost around 2' around the edge caused by shrubs, weeds, and the odd tree sapling, the only way to reach it, is to run a ladder across the centre, which just happens to take a couple of spare decking boards side by side, the ladder is clamped to the decking around the pond on one edge, so it shouldn't tilt, it takes all my weight so far... will start the clearance once the sun drops a bit.
If there's a splash, I'm sure you will hear about it lol...
Rustic
__________________
Ford Maverick GLX 1995 2.7TD LWB in illusion silver, 98k miles. Owned since new, for 22 years.
Best car I have ever owned.
Just wish I could drive it more.
rustic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 14:29   #18
terranosaurusdoug
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Yorkshire, J33 M62
Vehicle: 2000 Terrano lwb 2.7TDI
Posts: 5,500
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Blocky10 View Post
I found it in my grandads shed when he passed.
no offence intended bro
terranosaurusdoug is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 14:40   #19
rustic
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
rustic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Staffordshire
Vehicle: Maverick Mk I 2.7 TD LWB
Posts: 7,825
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by terranosaurusdoug View Post
Haha, I feel very young
I feel like a 21 year old somedays....



You all know where that punch line is going don't you lol...

.
__________________
Ford Maverick GLX 1995 2.7TD LWB in illusion silver, 98k miles. Owned since new, for 22 years.
Best car I have ever owned.
Just wish I could drive it more.
rustic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 14:44   #20
rustic
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
rustic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Staffordshire
Vehicle: Maverick Mk I 2.7 TD LWB
Posts: 7,825
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by terranosaurusdoug View Post
...

How do you think car owners have changed Rustic, would be interesting to read your thoughts on that one
I will love to answer that one, I already know how I am going to hit that one.
Watch this space.
Any other thoughts or wishes?

Uncle Rustic.
__________________
Ford Maverick GLX 1995 2.7TD LWB in illusion silver, 98k miles. Owned since new, for 22 years.
Best car I have ever owned.
Just wish I could drive it more.
rustic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 15:51   #21
terranosaurusdoug
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Yorkshire, J33 M62
Vehicle: 2000 Terrano lwb 2.7TDI
Posts: 5,500
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by rustic View Post
I feel like a 21 year old somedays....



You all know where that punch line is going don't you lol...

.
terranosaurusdoug is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 16:00   #22
terranosaurusdoug
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Yorkshire, J33 M62
Vehicle: 2000 Terrano lwb 2.7TDI
Posts: 5,500
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by rustic View Post
I will love to answer that one, I already know how I am going to hit that one.
Watch this space.
Any other thoughts or wishes?

Uncle Rustic.
Nope, it is an interesting subject, I'll just sit back and enjoy

One constant is people have always felt the need to get on the spanners and improve their vehicles, but that's what humans do with everything really. My six year old boy Jacob asked me a load of questions on saturday whilst driving, how was bread invented, how were crisps invented, how where bricks and roof tiles invented (I think the questions were dictated by whatever we were driving past ), and of course all those things are either an improvement or an adaptation of an existing product or principal, so I gave him a history lesson
terranosaurusdoug is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 16:51   #23
jims-terrano
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: UK
Posts: 12,965
Default

Haha great thread Rustic

Hey I got one of those fuse boxes in my baby and I still have a load of glass fuses, I knew they would come in handy one day.
Made laugh because all the downsides and things of the 1970s cars is one of the reasons I love my MG.

Can anyone remember those green sun shades across top of the windscreen? Or the same thing with an aerial element printed on it for your radio.
jims-terrano is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 17:06   #24
macabethiel
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Derby
Vehicle: Freelander & Jeep GC 3.0
Posts: 4,416
Default Home made anti-theft device on my MIni

Quote:
Originally Posted by rustic View Post
There were no car alarms then
My alarm on the mini comprised of a key switch mounted on the panel behind the front door, it was simple, if the switch was set, the horn would go off as soon as the door was opened, close the door, it stopped etc.?
I had a Mk 1 Mini Cooper 1275 S in the 60's and I fitted a small push button switch behind the roof lining (They were split in the middle with the interior light helping to hold it all in. Part of the wiring loom ran down the front screen pillar and along the side of the roof towards the rear supplying the rear lights & the SU fuel pump.

I cut the fuel pump wire and connected a simple push button switch fitted with a steel clip to anchor it to the roof steel work. If you remembered in advance of parking up you could use up the fuel in the system by switching off beforehand. I had mine stolen when I was at the cinema in Birmingham and found the vehicle abandoned about a quarter of a mile away as it had run out of fuel due to the pump being switched off.

I regularly forgot to switch it back on and the engine would start to splutter so I would hastily press the switch and all would be well. Over the years the headlining had a nice black fingermark where the switch was hidden !
macabethiel is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 17:51   #25
jims-terrano
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: UK
Posts: 12,965
Default

Stop swearing, I have the pleasure of getting a SU pump working
jims-terrano is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 18:31   #26
rustic
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
rustic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Staffordshire
Vehicle: Maverick Mk I 2.7 TD LWB
Posts: 7,825
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by jims-terrano View Post
Stop swearing, I have the pleasure of getting a SU pump working
Why on earth did they put the early mini fuel pumps on the rear sub frame, damp got in, the contacts corroded, and was difficult to hit with a hammer lol.
So mount it in the boot, fairly dry no grit or salt to bother it, and if it did need a thump, it was very easy to get to in the dark and the rain, which is the usual time for it to fail lol.

My mini broke down regularly, usually the points, condenser, that stupid stupid vacuum advance mechanism, that invariably had a small hole in the diaphragm or the rotor arm, faulty or dirty HT leads, or plug caps. or a cracked distributor cap.
Solution, get a good secondhand distributor, complete with all HT leads, set up the points, timing etc scratch the correct alignment on the distributor, then when you break down, swap the complete distributor, line up the scratch all sorted.
The distributor was held in by a pinch clamp, slacken one bolt about half a turn, off you go... less than 5 minutes tops, then when you get home, you can investigate why the old one failed, usually the points had burnt, a quick wipe with a diamond tipped file, re set the points and check timing, you only needed a bulb and a piece of wire lol.
Problem is, I carried so much stuff in the boot, spares, including a spare bypass hose and some fairy liquid, I could do one of those in three minutes lol, spare fuel, water, oil, boy it needed oil, 4 gallons of petrol, 1pint of oil lol, tools etc that the boot floor virtually dropped out lol. Mine was the floppy gear stick, guess which gear you are in lol, the gear stick would move about 5 or 6" sideways when in gear.
Now to all mini owners, did you know that there was a grease nipple on the gear selector shaft as it passed through the aluminium casting on the back of the gear box? no... that's where most of the wear occured causing a floppy stick lol... Yes after all these years you always wondered lol.
Rustic
__________________
Ford Maverick GLX 1995 2.7TD LWB in illusion silver, 98k miles. Owned since new, for 22 years.
Best car I have ever owned.
Just wish I could drive it more.
rustic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 21:44   #27
Terrano Steve
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: South west
Vehicle: Terrano
Posts: 522
Default

So much has changed in the last 50 years & as I don't have a crystal ball I wish I could stick around for another 50 years to see what is next.
Terrano Steve is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 21:57   #28
solarman216
Off road maniac
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
solarman216's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Bexhill on Sea
Vehicle: Y60 Patrol Me, 3 ltr Mrs
Posts: 17,431
Default

Excellent thread Rustic, we had a mini clubman in the 70's my Mrs learnt to drive in it, I was trucking abroad for weeks on end at the time, she loved her little mini and never had any bothers with it at all, she would collect me from Dover when I did "dodgy week ends", oh they were the days, Rick
__________________
Ex banger racer now off road maniac
Lokka on the front with manual hubs
Diff lock on rear
3 inch SS straight through exhaust
Manly winch bumper with 13000 lb winch
10 spike ground anchor, with multiple straps and blocks
Super strong body cills capped with scaffold pole
20% stronger springs all round
aggressive off road tyres on wheels so just swap.
Aim to get stuck and be completely self sufficient in extraction, love getting muddy, 2ft deep is good but rare.
solarman216 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 23:05   #29
elty001
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
elty001's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Aflreton,Derbyshire.
Vehicle: 2000se+ 2.7tdi terrano II
Posts: 6,832
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by rustic View Post
Here is a picture of a fuse box from this era, most leyland and rover cars had this set up.
There were two 35 Amp fuses, one for all things that turn off with the ignition, and the other, live all the time, for all lights, horn etc

If you wanted to hot wire a car, say if you lost the key, you simply linked both fuses together, no steering locks or alarms in those days.

The 35amp fuses actually blew at 35 amps in those days, but could safely carry 17.5 amps.
Cars were not power hungry then.

Landrover still have these fitted
elty001 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-08-2016, 23:52   #30
makeitfit
Senior Member
Click here to find out how to become a paid up member
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: on the beach WEST WALES
Vehicle: Maverick TDi BLACK mmm
Posts: 15,136
Default

My first cars had no radio let alone hifi
So I pinched my sister's battery powered philips cassette player. Wired in a home hifi speaker in the back and boom crappy sounds all round
Circa 1973
makeitfit is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 00:09.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Images online photo albums