May
From the pictures you will see that this is not a concours rebuild by any means, more a complete refresh of the car for another forty years of hard work. So if mods offend you, please do not read any further!
Progress and setbacks. Long time since the last report and the usual ups and downs of any resto have been the hallmark of the last two months. Biggest problem has been the body. Superb craftsmanship plus a misunderstanding over the final finish has slowed things down… Suffice to say I have learnt from the experience to be very precise as to what you, as the client, want from the process ? preferably in writing and with some sample finishes. I thought I had been clear, but apparently not clear enough. The finish was superb, but just not exactly what I wanted. I find it difficult to criticise someone?s obvious craftsmanship, but after some soul searching (I could accept the work and live with it) I decided that it would bug me for the rest of my term of ownership ? which I hope will be a long time! After a tense meeting we agreed that the change would be made, but this has put back the schedule several weeks and will involve some to-ing and fro-wing between the workshop and the paintshop. Ho hum?
Different story at the workshop where Neil has been fitting out the chassis ready for the body. No major refurb work is needed on the suspension, other than a clean, new disks and pads. Engine, gearbox, prop and diff are now fitted. Recon steering rack fitted ? the old one did not show any particular problems, but I had the recon one in stock so that went in. Some minor niggles with the Spyder chassis and suspension arms ? bushes a little tight, so needed a light ream (better than loose I suppose) and some other minor odds and ends. Brighter points with the chassis are the better engine mounting arrangement (fail safe and away from the heat of the exhaust), access and general ease of the job. And of course, lighter and stronger.
Late style dashboard has been sourced from Classical Dash in High Wycombe ( ultraleds.co.uk ); these are polarity dependant so you must test before fitting the dash! They are reverse polarity protected, so no worries there. I have used rear light LEDs for years and they have never failed, giving full brightness even at lower voltages, while being protected against high voltages and surges.
I sold off my old 3.77 diff and spent the cash on one of Sarto?s spinner tools. Arrived a week later, along with a suitable socket ? a thing of beauty! Can?t wait to try it out in earnest?
Thoughts now turn to the interior, which is a potential vexing area. The existing headlining is nasty, with worryingly organic looking brown stains and dribble marks - probably a mix of nicotine and general brown-ness of forty years of use. Neil has a contact who can make and fit a new headlining from scratch. Neil refuses to do this aspect of the rebuild as he says the Plus 2 headlining is particularly difficult and prefers to leave it to a specialist. Front seats have been sourced as previously mentioned ? MGB units. The seats that were in the car were fitted to the normal Lotus/Ford rails which allow the seats to tip forward. MGB seats come with fixed rails, providing a lever to allow the seats to tip forward instead. This seems to be a safer arrangement and we will see if the MGB rails can be used instead of the Lotus ones (they are lighter as well…). I noticed one of the +2s at Donnington on the Saturday had MGB seats as well ? is this a common mod? Has anyone else used the MGB rails? The rest of the original underdash trim is missing, replaced with plywood panels. I am not sure how this area will be resolved yet!
On a more esoteric note, at the last MOT, the tester noted that the chassis number on the plate didn?t match the documents… A bit of checking showed that a PO had registered a chassis change, so the chassis number started SPY? for a new Spyder chassis. This is clearly a mistake as the identity of the car goes with the body not the chassis for a Plus 2 (and Elan for that matter). I duly sent the documents to be amended correctly. After 6 weeks I had not heard anything so called up the DVLA and asked what the problem was. A nice lady asked me to wait while she checked with the supervisor. Apparently they had realised that something was amiss as I was requesting a change of number back to a previous number? I explained the problem and they said they would investigate further. I will keep the old chassis for a bit longer as this has the number that is in the documentation. At least the engine number is still correct as per the factory. Watch this space.
The Spa Classic is still the target date for completion, although I hope to put on a few hundred miles beforehand to shake it down. Lets hope it all goes smoothly from now on!
Jeremy