v8250
Well-Known Member
I see what you mean.
£656.51? Then it wants fitting which would be several hours, if not a day's work, I imagine?
Your best bet is to clean and inspect existing wiring and repair
I see what you mean.
£656.51? Then it wants fitting which would be several hours, if not a day's work, I imagine?
You don't really need any "lifting kit" to change a bulkhead. You might want somebody else to help you lift it out, and the new one in.I had a quote in today for swapping out the bulkhead.
He said that LR quote 35 hours, "but he'd discount it to £1800..."
A couple of months ago, someone else said it was "pushing a day's work..." and he was ex-REME, but also likes to charge.
Any thoughts on who to approach?
I could do it myself, but I don't have the lifting kit, or the extra muscle.
That is about right. Unbolt the stuff, but don't remove the rear tub. Then put the bulkhead in, and attach loosely, then use the doors as a guide to how many spacing washers to use between the the bulkhead and the chassis.Thanks Turboman, so hard top off (and sold), windscreen off, wings off, side rails off?
I have a manual coming but I'd like to start reading it up now if possible.
If the wiring is bad, that is probably a good idea. But remember to make a note of any wire colours that have been changed, or your re-assembly pics will be out of date.Lots of pics then and get the auto-electrician in to sort the butchered wiring prior to reassembly?
Good offer. Afraid I don't know what an M-Series is, but if I ever get one, I will tell you!That's fine, I really do appreciate any and all advice.
If you ever need M-Series advice, I'm more than OK there, even with the painting-by-numbers wiring.
Interesting. I don't mind the old Willys Jeeps, read a bit about the procurement, they were originally sourced from Willys, Ford, and another company, but it was such a fiasco that Willys ended up supplying all of them.Post-War US mil vehicles. They had the belated idea to standardise parts after the Jeep procurement fiasco and M-Series was born many trucks had identical coils, mast cylinders, etc.
Unbolt the stuff, but don't remove the rear tub. Then put the bulkhead in, and attach loosely, then use the doors as a guide to how many spacing washers to use between the the bulkhead and the chassis.
Work off what is actually there. Measurements mean nothing. Use the doors.34 3/4" is the magical figure needed between the A & B pillars
I think he wants to remove it, presumably to fit a canvas top.Do you have to remove the roof? I would have thought that you could remove the windscreen frame on its own, then remove the bulkhead.
I'm not saying that you definitely can, but it is worth checking.
Work off what is actually there. Measurements mean nothing. Use the doors.
34 3/4" is the factory set distance between A & B pillars. If doors are of correct size from reputable manufacturer they will be correct size. Any less a set distance and it's very difficult to align doors.
@Wolf Pack , measure your original doors - the new doors should be the same width. If fitting new door seals only buy original grade G door seals - aftermarket seals are crap/too hard and do not seal/shut properly. The grade G seals are 2-3 times more expensive than the cheapo's, but are worth every penny. For more info on bulkhead fitting and door alignment watch Britannica Mike's videos. They're very informative