Harry moved under his own steam for the first time in 4 year today
We drove all of 3 feet.
I replaced the leaking
rear brake cylinder with a Delphi replacement and bleed both rears again; that all went to plan. One thing that did crop up is that the new Delphi Cylinder is a smaller bore than the one that came off, but more significantly, smaller than the the one still fitted on the other side.
I'm guessing this will introduce some interesting braking characteristics so I guess I better replace the existing 'big' cylinder with a similar sized Delphi equivalent. New Mintex shoes went on ok. I've read pages and pages about "leading shoes" and "trailing shoes" and the importance for getting them the right way round. I understand the difference and why its important but the new shoes just don't have a leading or trailing shoes; you get one with the pin for the adjuster and that can only go one one side and one way and the friction material is in the middle on all shoes. I'm stumped. Bollocks to it, I cant see there is any other way.
Got the
dash all back together after re-routing the wiper actuator arm underneath the wiper pivot to getting going in the opposite direction, all that looks good now. No pictures, we all know what a Series 3 dash looks like
The new
Driver and Passenger seat belts are in, they were straight forward as I was replacing pre-existing units. They look good and operate nicely. I've a lap belt for the Little One's seat in the middle but no way of mounting in. I'll ask the local garage to sort this as I don't have the tools for fabricating spreader plates.
Fitted a few more bolts into the
bonnet hinges which I was short of last time. also bonnet related - no one tells you that if you upgrade the front wing fixing bolts at the front to S/S screws then you wont be able to refit the plate that holds the bonnet prop up by the battery. Having been scuppered by this, I got some more (3 needed) 1/4" x 1" bolts and replaced the S/S screws as necessary (its the 2 at the top). Sorry, forgot a picture but this is the bracket (picture stolen from Series123.com, ta very much).
I also got the
door bottoms on and adjusted to a nice 'clunk' close with a gentle push. I've heard this can be a bit of a fiddle but this happened quite easily. No doubt it all falls apart when you put the door tops on. Its hard to get good pictures as he's still indoors with not much room around.
There is now so few things to do I'm going to start a list on here and begin ticking them off. I'll get an MOT booked to add a bit of impetus to proceedings. In no particular order...
1. Replace oversized near side rear brake cylinder with Delphi replacement
2. Fit bonnet & prop
3. Fit grill (removing aftermarket Land Rover badge first)
4. Fit door tops (glue slider handle back on)
5. Fit Front & Rear 'wing ties' (find out where they go first)
6. Tighten anything that is / might leak
7. Find & fit air replacement heater matrix ducting (gaffer tape if not)
8. Fit rear door including drilling mount for check strap bolt
9. Re-fit Vehicle ID tag & interior fascia plates on bulkhead
10. Refit original steering wheel
11. Fit jack, handle etc
12. Fix hazard warning light circuit
and refit centre dash panels.
13. Tidy inner front wing wiring
14. Secure driver's side dash end panel, find & fit air director knob
15. Get local garage to fit centre lap belt
16. Tyre pressures
Then its a run through in preparation for the MOT -
1. Re-check all fluid levels
2. Re-check all bulbs
3. Wash
After that its some 'luxury' items...
1. Finish replacement steering wheel and fit
2. Re-trim replacement Defender seats and fit
3.Door / bonnet repairs - the steel frames are doing the usual so repair / replace as necessary. I've various second hand bits and pieces to chop and change with.
After all this time getting through this I'm starting to worry about the fear of missing out ("FOMO") once its done!
Frustratingly I've got a couple of busy weekends and work is bazerk at the moment so I cant just get on with it
Thanks for reading.