Things seem to have been progressing slowly the lat bit, but maybe it just seems that way. With the paint in bad shape, I got to spend some good quality time with the sander. And by quality time, I pretty much mean not that. By the time I couldn't feel my hands anymore, I'd gotten about this far
The next morning, I went to the store and got a paint stripping disk for the angle grinder. That worked a lot better. A couple coats of paint later, it was looking like this
I think my engine hoist gets more work as a stand for painting stuff than it does for moving engines about. The paint here isn't perfect, actually it's pretty crap. I'm not that great at painting, and painting big flat things is surprisingly hard. But, this is a racecar, so this is good enough. All it needs is some stickers of questionable taste, luckily I happen to have one
I'm about a chopped sticker short of living the meme, but maybe that's ok. Also, it turns out I'm not very good at applying vinyl and there are some bubbles. My solution has been to just leave the panel lie out in the sun, and that actually seems to be working.
This brings us back to the interior of the car. I finally got around to finishing the driver side door panel. I don't have enough of the red aluminum washers (also of questionable taste, they say JDM Racing on them, because of course they do), so I made the black washers for the door pull and oh E36 M3 handle.
I also clear the roof now with the seat leaned forward, which is good. I wouldn't be under the bottom of a cage if this car had one, but it doesn't so I guess that's ok. Probably best I don't think too hard about rolling the car.
I also got the water gauge installed. It required me to add in a bit of the trim I took out of the car, but not much of it. The backing panel is made of scrap aluminum from the roof, I barely had enough. I blanked off the stereo hole with some scrap PVC foam stuff, which I have more of.
Then began the messy job of pulling out the coolant lines for the heater. This required me to pull all the brackets for the hand brake and some other things. So, I took the opportunity to go ahead and re-install the front half of the skid plate.
I don't think I've talked about this before, the skid plate is just 22 gauge sheet of metal wrapped over a frame of 1/8 steel. The front half extends from the front subframe back to the front engine mount, and 'protects' the gas tank and coolant lines. It's not much protection, but rally cross isn't rally, I don't expect as big of hits.
I then spent about an hour trying to figure out what this thingy is
The reason I care is it connects to the vacuum line which feeds the brake booster, and I wanted to know if I needed to leave it in place, of if it was part of the HVAC and could be removed. I had to do something with the vacuum lines, but what?
Luckily, Toyota includes a vacuum diagram on the engine cover. Of course, there's no brake booster on that diagram, only the stuff in the engine bay. Also, the factory repair manual I have says nothing about this thing. There's seriously no vacuum diagram I can find for the front of this car. Luckily this this is plugged into the electrical harness, and that plug is labeled as a 'water valve'. The water valve for the heater is actually vacuum actuated, and because this car was made in the 80's, the vacuum power is actuated by an electrical switch. It's an amazingly complicated contraption to actuate a water valve into the heater core, I'm surprised they don't break more often.
The gauge obviously needs to actually be connected to a sensor, or it's not very useful. Ideally I'd want it connected to the inlet of the radiator, because the radiator is maybe a little too good at cooling and I want to see the gauge show warm. Unfortunately, the inlet is not very easy to hook into, here's a photo
We're under the car here, radiator on the right wheel well on the left. The inlet hose travels through the driver-side wheel well and into the bottom of the radiator. There's not really much protecting the coolant hose from all the nasty sharp rocks and such in the wheel well other than a flimsy plastic cover. I should probably do something about that, but for the time being the issue is that there is also no room for to add a straight coupling to install the water temp sensor in. There's a lot more room on the outlet side, so that's where the sensor is going.
Here's the sender installed. Yellow line is the sensor, black line is chassis ground. The sensor was meant to go in an engine block, in which case the ground line isn't required. All that's left from here is to add some coolant, and start the car. And then spend longer than I want bleeding the coolant system.
So, I went to do that, and found that the car wouldn't start, no starter solenoid click, nothing. I tried a few little things to get it running, but it was time for dinner and I suspect I'll just make things worse if I keep hacking on it. There's a good chance that the no-start condition is because I leaked a bunch of coolant on the starter cables.