nice!
In reply to Alfaromeoguy :
Good taste in cycling gear as well! Seems that you have an Italian theme going. I am just riding mountain bikes these days with the exception of my steel Bianchi commuter and the custom fixie and the custom dirt jumper and... haha. As a shop guy I get to be curmudgeonly and mostly ride steel bikes but the nice carbon stuff really does fly doesn’t it?
Never saw one of those Avalon interiors. Dash outlines look like they'll compliment the stang gauge pod.
Way too many colors & textures in that Avalon interior!
This should be a fun car to drive when done.
Not sure I fully understand your paint process.
I only ask because you mention that you want a "perfect" bodyshell and I don't understand your approach. The picture shows that you had more sanding to do in the filler primer stage before you put any paint on the primers; the dark spots are low areas that either need filling or the surrounding area need more sanding. Sanding the clear with 1000 grit will give you a nice shine, but it wont make things flat; that has to happen entirely before the paint goes on. Are you doing guidecoats?
Also, why one panel at a time? Are you spraying or rolling the paint and clearcoat?
I am pretty new to this paint game, but a neat trick I learned is that when I think the primer is ready for paint, I wet it down with a hose and look at the reflection. The water acts just like a clearcoat and it will show any imperfections. If you are happy with what you see at this stage, then you will be happy with the paint.
Pete
In reply to Alfaromeoguy
Now why did you go do that? I was watching this thread because there aren't many Alfas on here any more. Just because there weren't a lot of comments doesn't mean we weren't paying attention.
Alfaromeoguy said:I removed my posts. Very little interest. Guess my car was not a maita.
It's not about interest, it should be about documenting your project. And just because people don't comment does not mean they are not watching.
Funny you mention about the Miata- I've got a Miata "restoration" project that very few are looking at and commenting on, too. I'm going to still post the project, even with it being very, very slow.
That looks SO GOOD in that engine bay! Please continue to share - for every person that comments, there's 10-20 that are watching and reading along. Thank you for putting the effort in to keep up the thread.
I was worried about the left side of the engine,close to steering box. I cut a large Styrofoam block to shape of the engine,to get an idea one fit. Looked like block to steering interference . I also cut the oil filter mount off,welded in some aluminum plate over the cut, but added 2 an 8 fittings for remote oil cooler and filter.
Was not the problem,have good room, I can remove intake manifold and starter easily.
It was the right side of the engine, exhaust header is fine, the down pipe will not fit.but I do believe I have a fix for that. 2 flexible exhaust pipes, clean oil off them ( from factory ) wrap some masking tape around the pipes at 300 mm each, drill hole in each masking tape spot, tack weld to now cut down pipe mount ( leaving 30 mm of pipe attached to the flange ) attach the collector pipe to the ends of flexible pipe .no weld just force.
shape to need then after shape is correct spray expandable foam into the holes I drilled into the flexible pipe, let the foam expand and harden
Cut spot welds off, remove now unflexable pipe, let muffler shop copy in S.S. pipe, refit to car, making shire it is in the right location. Tack weld. Remove and finish the weld.
I haven’t been on GRM for a while but this was the first thread I clicked on. I was confused there for a minute.
It’s nice when folks comment, but a lack of comments doesn’t mean nobody’s reading, or that nobody will.
Great color choice.
Engine specs. 2.2 base engine. .020 over. Molly side coat on pistons, ceramic on the tops. 10.0/1 compression . 3 angle valve seat cut. Lots of work on the head porting. Back of intake valves a coating of some stuff that makes the back sides slippery to any build up. Polished the combustion chambers to eliminate any possible hot spots. Beehive valve springs. Pistons and rods are perfectly balanced. Rods are polished to mirror finish,( I got carried away ,took them down to 1500 wet/Dry paper, with olive oil to keep paper wet. the lower 2 rods are not quite polished when photos were taken, they are perfect now. )
Retainers are oem. All flash on the insides of the block removed. oil filter cast into block. That was removed for fit .Those passageway blocked, drilled and an 8 bungs welded on for remote oil cooler and filter. Intake manifold is off a 2.4 ecotec. The throttle body is oem 2.2 with adapter from my freind, Shawn at CBM motorsport. They also re programmed the ecu ,delete passkey for me, 7k soft cut redline, and program for more performance. Header off ebay ( you know the rest on how I will fit the down pipe)
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