great work kenny, although yours is for much different reasons we seem to be in a similar position with progress, good to see your pushing forward, and in great style as per.
Cheers Neil
Yeah, things have been pretty difficult recently, lot going on, long and short of it is we're moving house again so the car has taken a bit of a back seat lately.
That said, I managed to get down to the workshop for the weekend and got a few wee jobs done. Not many in progress pictures I'm afraid,
Due to the sequential box being an afterthought, a few things meant I couldn't use the standard metal pushrod for the gear change. The additional X brace on the bulkhead looks like it would probably have been in the way and the mother of a switchpanel was most definitely a show stopper, given the time it took to built that I didn't really want to start over.
Therefor the easiest solution for the gearchange was to use a push/pull cable. I contacted a few places and eventually went with a company called Cablecraft, very helpful and the quality of their work is spot on. We decided to use their medium duty conduit which is rated at over 100kgs of push, so more than enough to cope with what was required. I measured up the route and a few days later I had the cable
I then set about modifying the back of the gearlever frame to hold the outer of the cable, used a few bits that I had laying around to make the clamp.
There's a KA Sensors GSS Load cell in the linkage, this will enable more accurate ignition/fuel cut for upshifts and will also allow a throttle blip on downshifts.
At the gearbox end, some more jiggery pokery, made up another bracket, there wasn't a lot to work with so hopefully this will be sufficient, time will tell if it breaks.
Very crude, but using a set of kitchen scales it looks like it needs about 18-20lbs of push or pull to make a change. Certainly no danger of changing gear by mistake that's for sure!
I was running out of time by now but wanted to get a start on mounting the Astra PAS pump.
The pump came with the standard bracket so that made a good starting point. Chopped off all the original mounting points and offered it up. The first new mounting was straight bit of 25mm tube with an M10 threaded insert welded into the end, this was then bolted through the top skin of subframe. Its surprising ridged as it is but it would almost certainly fatigue fail if left like this. It really needs another 2 fixing points to triangulate it so I'll get that done the next time I'm down there. The pressure hose will be nice and short which is a bonus, just need to decide if I'm going to run an oil cooler.