The bloke warned us that it would cost an awful lot to get shaun road legal after its dramatic MOT failure two months before. We saw the failure certificate and virtually every box had a comment in it bar the engine and gearbox, exactly the parts that we cared about so that was just fine with us.
It had been sitting there since its failure so somewhere between 1 and 2 months without being touched so we were pretty surprised when it started second time. The engine was most definately cold before we started and the guy was so paranoid about not starting, moving it illegally that we were inclined to believe that it really was a couple of months since it was started.
I duly offered the guy a piffling £ 75 which I expected him to haggle up but which he accepted. Not only that but he threw in a load on anti-freeze, de-icer, oil and a krook lock. We arranged to pick it up the following evening.
Picking Shaun (he wasn't shaun then, just a sierra) was a little nerve-wracking, I'd had a wibbly moment and felt guilty about the guy being so broke and gave him £ 85. All I had to do now was get the car back to my driveway. "Just driving it to where we can do repairs for its mot, honest officer". Driving an unfamiliar, and mechanically slightly dubious car on a dark wet evening isn't good but we managed to get it back without incident.
With a part charged battery shaun started straight away like the ever beaver we hoped he would be. Unfortunately he kept stalling, we later discovered this was because the piece of string fell off the choke. Drove cautiosly to the garage, again without incident. Phew. Shauns last jouney complete. Ahhhhh..
Decided to have a look under the bonnet, removed the air filter - in a very bad way, have to replace it. Bits of tubing selotaped in place - hmm not good. Carb seems to be held together with a jubilee clip where its got a huge crack down the side. Will have to replace that as well, weber 40s methinks. Removed the washer bottle, that at least is in a good state.
Tried to get a look at the spark plugs, HT leads all snapped trying to remove them, well they probably could have done with being replaced in any case. Spark plugs are unhelpfully none of the sizes that we happen to have spark plug removers for. Need to buy a suitable socket and get them out sometime. Ford seem to have been particularly unhelpful by randomly mixing imperial and metric bit all over the place.
Took the rocker cover off to get a look at the camshaft, seems in very good nick, gasket is in a bad way though. Think we'll fit a new camshaft in there regardless.
Disconnecting 90% of the heating/cooling system and removed the radiator to give us some more breathing space. Put the seats down and removed the parcel shelf to create a nice little rubbish dump. Bumper and bonnet go straight in, tidied up most of the junk lying around and chucked that in there as well.
Ian thoughtfully lost the retaining bolt that hold the hacksaw in place before we even got a chance to use it. He can go and grovel to B&Q for a new one. That rather scuppered us removing the front end of the car for the moment.
Started on the exhaust manifold, got that off and started on where it joins to the exhaust. Can hardly budge the nuts, light starts fading so quickly pack up. Ian can have another go at that with the aid of some WD40 tommorrow on his day off.
We came to the conclusion that the car was do-able over the weekend so went off to hire an engine hoist. Just about fitted the thing in my car and got it back together once at the garage. HINT: make sure the car is in the right position before you start removing the engine, the hoist arm goes up and if it hasn't got enough height then its not going to be easy to get the car together enough to move it elsewhere. Engine came out incredibly easily, the most difficult bit was shuffling the hoist around to find somewhere to put it down.
With the engine preventing the car from living in the garage and all its fluids drained we left it parked outside overnight.
Shaun now safely located on my driveway we worked through till well after dark with the aid of a table lamp and a battery powered flourescent tube. Got the suspension dropped, ripped the bumper off to give us some extra clearance and wheeled the suspension out. The hardest bit was actually removing the handbrake cable which was attached somewhere under an inch of grease and muck. Had we realised there was a circlip there we probably could have had it off in a couple of minutes rather than an half an hour.
With all the parts off Shaun we cleared up, wheeled the suspension units back to the garage for cleaning up and left Shaun there.
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