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Ulu
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I took all the frame rails down again, to trim some more floor.

 

In the process I decided to do more work in the tunnel, now, before all the welding.

 

I want to remove 4 more heater cable guide tubes, and they will just be harder to access later.

 

One end of each tube is welded thru the tunnel, and all are now plugged with sealant. I can drill those out.

 

The forward ends all terminate on a small doubler, below the parking brake lever.

 

I will make a tool to reach in the tunnel, twist, and snap the spotwelds. Then I can really clean the tunnel out.

 

It will all be harder than it sounds.

 

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Posted (edited)

Well that didn’t work. I had to saw.

 

I really had to back off from my chassis setup, to address several minor chores, which I have foolishly neglected.

I dressed off the ragged end of my clutch cable guide tube & patched it out with solvent and paper patches. It took about 3doz times before it was clean enough.

There you can see the raggedness around the accelerator cable guide, which still needs dressing.

The VW tunnel has a rat nest of shift rod, fuel line, and 10 control cable guides. I only need the parking brake, clutch, gas & fuel. The six heater cable guides needed to go. In the photos, two are already cut out.
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There is a notch at the arrow, where I have nearly cut these 2 tubes loose at the welds.

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The same bracket holds the parking brake cables you see, so I had to to go carefully.

I used my Pakistani Sawzall to reach in and cut these 4 tubes loose.
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By hand. This was tedious, but accurate. The genuine Milwaukee blade made it happen.

The other tube ends were welded thru the tunnel & I have one drilled free. One I have cut loose from the other end of the tunnel, by reaching inside, with a mini tubing cutter.

It was about 112F in the boatyard, and I had to quit before those 4 tubes were all removed.

 

Edited by Ulu
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you a determined varmint for sure...but like I tell mums, won't get done sitting on the couch.  Stick with it, its a process for sure.  Your temps are up there also, hope your humidity is low.  We got our rains and sure am happy and it has continued to rain so we staying high on the humidity chart and even mid 90's feels super muggy.  Oh well, price we pay for not shoveling snow in the winter.  

 

Calling the water upgrade done, the filtering system is great upgrade also, set the new water heater in place the other day.  Mowed yesterday and will cart off some stuff to the recycler, old dead water heater and a few pipes.  Next up, major shop clean and sort....figure open the door on one end and the other door on the far end and just drive a skid loader through would work.  I will be soaking wet with sweat in short order I am sure even with the fan running.  

 

 

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“It’s a dry heat . . . .”

 

I have large aquariums, pumping 425 gallons of water around 24/7/365.

 

The humidity here is so low, that even with all that going, static electricity is an issue.

 

 

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3 hours ago, Ulu said:

The humidity here is so low, that even with all that going, static electricity is an issue.

Static electricity does not like humid conditions but thrives in low humid conditions.

I worked as a service engineer in the printing trade and in the winter we had huge problems with static electricity.

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Today I got all 4 remaining heater control tubes out of the tunnel. I was glad to see them go. They didn’t leave willingly.
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The welds were larger on the 2nd set. I made an improved Polish sawzall, which eased the cutting somewhat.
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Once I broke them loose, I had to hook them with a heavy wire.
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Then I drew the pairs out with a small slide hammer.
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It took a little knocking, because they had to straighten up somewhat to clear the tunnel.

Wow…..look at that room! Now I can finally clean this mess up. 
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Eventually I must get the brake line and new fuel line in here, but first some serious rust abatement.

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Today I finally got the accursed shifter rod out of the VW tunnel.

BF3C1BD2-0700-492F-AA20-EA6BFBECC183.jpeg.69d5d65e5f1de6991af49ed3df7c9de4.jpeg

The rod was shortened with a steel slug welded in. A bit. On one side only. ;(

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Clearly this was done while the rod was inside the car, perhaps because they had already assembled it all too far. The whole front suspension suspension adapter would have had to come off to get to the access port on the front of the VW frame. Or maybe they made it too long and had to mod it so the car would shift correctly. Who knows?

The good news is that I have a new bushing and this good German rubber coupler assembly.

Once the shift rod has been removed you can see even more clearance inside the tunnel.
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Also you see this little gun site which is where the plastic shifter bushing is supposed to remain. Because of the lumpy welding arrangement it simply could not happen and that was that.

Looking inside from the back of the chassis I can see that there really is very little rust on the bottom of the tunnel floor. It is only superficial rust because of this drain hole that let the water run out back here. This is looking really good.
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After all of the vacuuming and hose washing and air hose blowing and more vacuuming and turning this thing practically on its head, I was very surprised to see that there are still some remains of mice nests inside the car.
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This is probably stuff that was caught in the seams and I vibrated it loose when I took a pneumatic muffler chisel to the steel.

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 I had to fix that horrible shift rod.

The plastic rod bushing is like a grommet with a wire clip. About $3 each. I bought a new one last year. This clip was too tight & the plastic was split long years ago.

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The area under the bushing was pretty rough. I have burnished it mercilessly. It will be OK with some grease.
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Not only was this old welding awful, it didn’t make the rod strong. It was quite crooked here and yet it straightened up way too easily. That’s what happens when you put all the welding on one side.

I ground off the blob neatly, straightened it in the vise, and drilled for 8 plug welds into the slug.
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Much straighter now and 20x stronger.

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I got the coupler all burnished up, and the rubbers and screws are still nice.

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I also found my new shift rod bushing & it fits.

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I spent some time cleaning inside the tunnel, and it is looking better. I could not remove the parking brake cables though.

 

I wanted to patch out the guide tubes with Gumout, but they were modified crudely. They are both bent sharply enough to clear the relocated shifter (at the yellow arrow) that these cannot come apart unless I cut the cable ends off. 

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Then I will have to straighten them out and buy new cables.

 

These cables came from two different cars and do not appear rusty, frayed, or damaged. I thus declare they will last the life of the car, and do not need repair.

 

I will flush them with solvent and cable lube, then seal them up with tape before I continue sanding and brushing the rusty tunnel.

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I did some very similar work but not to the extent that you are with this floor pan when I rebuilt a Porsche long years back.  It can be most fun feeding a throttle cable through as I did with another Porsche just a couple of years ago.   Will you be worrying any at all about the heater ducts and control cable or giving your area not concerned with heat.  

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No heaters are needed. No defrosters. This is a sunny day car. By dumping the heaters I trimmed 35 lbs of the tail of a tailwagger. It has a heavy VW multi-speed wiper motor. It weighs more than a Toyota starter. I may dump that too.

 

Today I made some longer rods & scrubbed rust from both ends of the tunnel, plus up from the shifter hole.

 

I got farther than this, but it still needs work. Maybe by Wednesday it will be ready to paint.

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Nope. No paint yet.  I had other chores, but I did get 99% of the tunnel brushed out in another round of rusty fun today.

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It’s pretty good save a few rusty corners. The back end is pretty good too.

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This device was essential.
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And before you ask, Yes, I have seen at least 200 episodes of Red Green.

 

Death Wheel 10,000 and the Implements of Destruction.

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Posted (edited)

BTW kids, don’t ever use an angle-head grinder or die grinder with wire brushes, like that, in the open!

 

The 4.5” wire wheel and no guards will pepper you with sharp wires and rust.

 

I was working with one arm up the tunnel, so the tunnel was my guard. I was wearing a leather gauntlet, but still took one in the bicep. Shoulda worn the leather sleeves too!

 

Also, I did NOT try to look at this process! I was essentially working blind, so I wouldn’t go blind.

Edited by Ulu
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I can’t believe I plugged in the welder and turned it on and set it up for this. Zit-zit and it was done!

 

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That little dot is about the smallest weld I have ever made, and it’s a good one.

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It helps to be cheap too. ;)

 

There was a big window cut in the tunnel by the shifter, and I finally dressed off the lumps. I used a worn disk from the angle grinder, on a 30” long 5/16” rod, chucked in a high speed pneumatic die grinder.

 

It was a bear to control, but at 10,000 rpm it snagged off the weld in record time. I got it all blown out, vacuumed out, and wiped out with solvent.

 

This AM, I finally shot some rust treatment inside the tunnel. I’m finally done with sanding and brushing in there. I started spraying a rust-etching satin black, but it got too hot to spray. It still needs 2 good coats of paint.

 

 

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Posted (edited)

Today I waited for prime painting temperatures, after 9:00 am, then shot a quart of rust-converting paint inside the tunnel, from these magnum spray cans. Small cans might have been easier.

By noon it was 100f so that paint is curing desert-style.

From the rear:
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I was putting a lot of rust-converting paint into the pinch weld seam, with the nozzle & the red tube from a can of WD-40. There were strategic holes for seat belts etc that I used to work that in the middle of the tunnel.

Also I taped a can of paint to a long tube, with a trigger rigged using welding wire. I stuck this into the tunnel to get half the paint on.

I was finishing up the last can and I shot that red tube right thru a hole in to the tunnel. I decided to let it all dry in there before I try to stick my arm inside the tunnel.

 

From the front:
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I got 3 heavy coats of black paint in that tunnel, but it looks grey in some photos.

A fellow in our motorcycle forum shot the WD-40 red tube into the cylinder of his motorcycle. He recovered it with gum and wire, but his nickname foreverafter was Redtube.

So . . . Please do not even think of it. It’s already been taken.

Edited by Ulu
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Posted (edited)
On 8/4/2024 at 3:45 PM, Los_Control said:

You ever google redtube out of curiosity? Your friend might be a movie star.


I never actually met him. He was just one of the guys on the Kawasaki Nomad forum. Or maybe the Vulcan Baggers forum? Delphi?

 

I don’t remember… It’s been almost 20 years.

 

Also, my wife made me take her to Hollywood once, but I don’t give a crap about movie stars. I’m sure some of them are very nice people, but as an engineer I have very little in common with actors and singers and dancers.

 

I used to hang out with people like that when I was a kid back in the 70s. There was a theater group and I worked with some of them that had “day jobs”. I was a roadie for a semi-famous country rock band. Okay they did release one LP, but you wouldn’t know it. Those guys all want their privacy now and we don’t socialize, so I don’t talk about it much.

 

Theater people and show people are very different from me. It was like freaking Peyton Place all the time around those people. I never wanted a intimate relationship with any of them.

 

I’d prefer people who know how to plug a tire or find a faulty ground wire or design a sound system, or a computer, or a stylish roadster.

 

Why do I take the time to rant about this nonsense? I think it’s because my wife is just the opposite. She is gaga over celebrities and spends a lot of time watching their antics on the television.

 

So what happened to all the people from the band? One by one they:

 

One died of a heroin overdose.

 

One smashed into a truck and died, drunk driving.

 

Gave up music and went to work for a supermarket.


One’s car ran off the road in the snow and he smashed up his face. He gave up any public appearances.

 

One went back to college and became the curriculum director of a small local college.

 

Our female singer retired from music and married a certified public accountant.

 

One became a Xerox machine repair man. He was the guy I used to hang out with.

 

And one of them (the last time I heard) was still playing guitar professionally, as a hired studio musician in SoCal. 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Ulu
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I got the shifter rod back in the tunnel, and the coupler on. Then I put in the new rear brake line. This pre-made line fits a stock Volkswagen bug but it will also fit my car. It comes straight.

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I have to bend it myself.
 

My dad bought these tubing tools when we body-swapped the Scout in 1974. They do come in handy.

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I drilled a 1/2” hole through the frame closure, just below the throttle cable housing.

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That tube has to make a literal corkscrew.

 

And there it is. I first made a bent wire model of this, then one from scrap tubing. Finally the full tube was installed and bent.

 

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I panicked when I first looked at this (inverted) photo, because it appears that I have kinked the tubing (!) but this is not true at all. I just happened to shoot it from a funny angle.

 

Bends on the other end will have to wait until the master cylinder is installed.

 

Next I have to put in the new fuel line.

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The 3/8” fuel line is in. Why 3/8”? Someday this car might have a bigger engine running methanol. 
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VW fuel line is only 4mm. About 1/8”.

I left it in to run my vacuum gage.

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I blew it. When I installed the shift rod the bushing wasn't snapped in tight. I discovered this while I was strapping all the tubes together in the tunnel.

 

So I had to disassemble the coupler while crawling underneath the chassis, and then fish the whole rod back out through the front of the tunnel.

 

Because it wasn’t properly snapped into place the bushing came out with it. I cleaned everything up and re-greased it and snapped the bushing back into place. I checked it carefully before I reinstalled the rod and the coupler.

 

I put the frame rails all back together and set them up so I could start measuring and trimming again.

 

I put the big trammel back together as well. It’s virtually impossible to work with one person, so I’m going to have to draft my wife out there sometime when it’s not 100° in the shade.

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I have the trimming mostly done, and it all fits, maybe. The cross member is 1/8” too long.

 

I can shorten the tunnel or trim the crossmember, or let the frame be a bit fat. I only have 1/4” total clearance to get the body on.

 

Meanwhile, I started burnishing the frame rails and I put some rust converting paint inside the rails before I weld them.

 

I only did half & I will do the rest today.

 

They’ve been sitting for months since I welded up the holes, and had collected some new dirt and rust.

 

I saw this and it reminds me of working at the junkyard in 1972.

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When in the army we were the relieving trick and would take the turnover.....often it would include a comment like pos 31 in area XX has been Fritzed....Fritz was not the most successful maintenance man.... usually the item he worked now required a complete alignment.  

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