Another very windy and rainy horrible day here in the Netherlands. It has been wheather like this for weeks, and the forecast is it will be weather like this for the next fortnight as well.
But I am busy in my garage! Today, Saturday first thing Johan came around and delivered the wheels for the Spider! New Michelin Tires fitted too, all balanced!
I think they look gorgeous:
Balancing lead on the inside. No hideous bits of leads showing on the outside. No paint on the centre hub!
I had also give Johan the spare wheel and asked him to put the best old tire on it.
Earlier this morning I had gotten the new and cleaned and polished parts ready for installation:
First thing was to mount the brand new centre plates with the Alfa logo onto the rims. Took a bit of scraping of the paint as they would not fit. I put some vaseline underneath it to stop any corrosion.
When fitting light alloy rims to steel hubs it is good practice to put some grease all over the hub. Alloy (aluminium) and steel will start to corrode. The grease will ensure that you can get the rim easily of the hub!A bit of grease on the bolts helps too. Just do not get grease onto the mating surface of the lug nuts and the rims. The torquing value are typically provided for dry clean surfaces, unless specifically mentioned that you need to apply oil or grease!
Put all four wheels back on, tightened them loose with my pneumatic torque wrench. Used a jack on both sides of the car to lift so I could pull the axle stands from underneath the Spider.
Finally, with the wheels on the ground, I used my proper torque wrench to tighten the lug nuts properly. In this case 110 Nm. Four nuts, so you tighten by starting on one nut, than 180o below, next 90o up, 180o across. Only push the torque wrench so you hear feel one click, then move to the next nut. Keeping going around in the same pattern until none of the nuts move any more, with one click.
Looks smashing:
Just about as I was finished with the wheels of the Spider, Dirk rocked up with the new striping for the Jaguar.
He got going straight away:
It was immediately clear that the new striping did not match the old striping. We discussed and since Dirk had enough material and time, we decided to replace all old striping. The likelyhood of finding an exact colour match were remote at best and we both quite liked how the new striping looked!
So Dirk took to taking all the old striping off.
Dirk used a hot air gun, a special little plastic scraper and lots of elbow grease. The old striping did come off, but it was also clear that it had sort of “eaten into the paint”. Luckily the new striping would cover all of that!
Once all the old striping was removed, Dirk buffed the whole area with a very special cleaner/degreaser. It removes everything from the surface, dirt, grime but also wax. Also, it is a sort of helps putting the new stripping in place. It ensures the new striping does not adhere to the paint straight away. So you can move it around easily, push bubbles out, get it perfectly aligned.
Once properly in position, Dirk uses the heat gun and an Infra Red thermometer. He heats the striping to exactly 80oC, pushes down on the striping and that is how it finally bonds with the paint on the car!
Once the left side was done, I turned the car around for better access to the right side:
I am very pleased with the end result. I am pleased we decided to replace all the striping. This looks so much more fresh!
In all, it took Dirk almost four hours to complete this job. I certainly could not have done it. It looks easy enough, but it takes a lot of experience and a very steady hand to get these very delicate stripes exactly in the right position.
Whilst Dirk was working on the striping, I had another look at the right front speaker of the Spider. Remember, it is not working. I need to get it out, but it is blocked, partly by the AC condensor and AC fan. I spend some time with flashlights, mirrors and scope poking around to figure out how te get it removed. I am not much the wiser yet. Other than I have noticed that the mounts for the AC fan look as if they have been glued/cemented. So when I start taking it apart, it is very likely to brake again. We will cross that bridge when we get to it.
Next thing: Monday and Tuesday, Matthieu will be polishing the Spider!
Jeroen