Thursday, 26 June 2025
Well Lit
It's Trying To Tell Me Something
On day 6 of the road trip, the fuel pump decided not to play ball in the hotel car park, this was better that out on a moorland road, but still not a good thing. I fiddled with fuses & all those things you do when you're not sure where to begin & suddenly it was working again - excellent. I quarantined the old fuses & the rest of the trip was great.
A week or so later I went to Screwfix - 50 yards before I arrived the engine died - no fuel pump. I pushed it into the Screwfix car park & gave the fuse a hard stare. It appeared to be fine, but the plastic around the "fuse wire" bit looked a little bulged, had it been getting warm? I swapped the 10a for a 15a & it fired straight up - excellent.
On testing, both the 10a fuses were fine, which was odd. Then yesterday I decided to go to my brother's. I got no more that 1/4 mile when the fuel pump stopped & no amount of wiggling the fuse was going to re-start it. Then the starter stopped working as well. I pushed it home.
Once in the garage I had the dash out of it & poked around a bit. There was a large orange wire coming from the fuse box, it came from the fuel pump relay, there was a large grey wire going to the fuse box, it went to the fuel pump fuse. You might think that they would just join together somewhere near the fuse box - or even be just one wire. No, this is a Kit Car & further more, a kit car that's has severalowners, many of whom have "improved" it, so between the orange & grey wires was this collection of random sized wires & connectors. I simplified it down to the minimum it needed
Monday, 16 June 2025
Busy Weekend II
On the Sunday we went to "Brooklands Relived", a sort of Goodwood revival - ish. There's not much of the track left, but there were demonstration runs up the Test Hill, an Autotest event & a Sprint on the Mercedes World track. The cars were mostly '30s ranging from tiny Austin 7 specials to huge 4 1/2 litre Bentleys - lots of those. there was also a bit of "drag racing" on the start / finish straight, the surface is really far too rough, but it was good fun to watch.
Thunderbird & Chrysler New Yorker in the "Pride of Ownership" concourse.
"Vitamin T" was built by the esteemed Nick Butler (of Revenge & Andromeda fame). It's a Model T "Doctor's Coupe" designed by Fords so that Doctors could drive it wearing a top hat. It was looking absolutely splendid for a 40 year old hot rod, we spoke to the owner who also owns Andromeda & Nykilodeon - he's not a hot rodder by inclination, he just admires Nick Butler's engineering.So all in all a very good day, not particularly what I was expecting, it was better than that, would I recommend it? Yes, we saw cars & events you wouldn't normally see & to illustrate that, I'll end with this pic.
Busy Weekend
There were a cople of things in the calendar this weekend, the "Air Day" at Blackbushe Aerodrome & "Brooklands Re-lived" at - unsurprisingly - Brooklands.
Air Day is a nice event, quite low key, but a bunch of interesting cars turn up & a bunch of interesting planes fly in. there isn't an airshow as such, but there are often "fly-bys" & joy rides, as well as the usual comings & goings. So here's the Stylus parked up between a lovely Italian Car - & a modern Ferrari.The 500 had alloys & a pearl paint job & looked lovely in the sunshine.
After we parked, we started by looking at the planes.
I've mentioned this one before, Lockheed Electra G-AFTL, was bought for clandestine spying using hidden cameras to photograph Germany before WWII - look it up, it's a fascinating story.Also a couple of Miles Messengers, surely Sufficient in the tail department. Designed to a request from within the ranks rather than an "official" requirement, the war office initially refused to buy any out of sheer pique, but relented & several were used as transports for high ranking folk, including if I remember rightly, Montgomery into France on D-Day. This is the only surviving ex-military one.
We were visited by the BBMF Lancaster, which did three fly-bys & caused many a phone to be pointed skyward.
Two '32 model Bs, fantastic.
More orange - but with added flake, there's not too many cars can carry off a big flake paint job, but it just looks so good on a Buggy.
Wednesday, 11 June 2025
Back To Work .....
Nearside Rear Wheel Bearing - It was weeping, I'd fixed the off side when I first bough the car, but didn't mess with the other side as it was dry & DON'T POKE AT IT! but a combination of pot holes & high lateral "G" had seen a small amount of oil escape. So I borrowed my brother's slide hammer & sorted that out - I think, I'll need to check it once in a while.
Camera - While we were away, one of the cameras was a constant concern, on day one it decided that after a coffee stop it was bored with video & instead took stills about two seconds apart for the rest of the day - just short of 6,000 of them! On other days it repeatedly switched off after about 15 seconds, on other days still, it worked perfectly all day. I gave it a hard stare in the garage when I got home & initially decided it had just broken & started looking at alternatives, but it seems it might be the memory card, swapping to another make seems to have bought it back under control.
Brake Lights - Duncan told me they weren't working on day one, I did eventually fix this while away & it was all down to my own stupidity, but though it's fixed, there's now only one switch on the brake lights again, so I need to look at adding a second one - not started that yet.
Tail lights - they're Fiat Coupe units & they're fine - they look better than most kit car tail lights (this is a bit of a bugbear of mine). As the Stylus is painted it cuts down my options, the Fury was gel-coat, so could be modified. I have come up with a way of "tunnelling" the light into the rear panel without cutting the body or damaging the paint. So far I have only done the stop / tail lights as the indicators are in an awkward place (when seen from the inside) & need a little more work, but I like the effect.Front Number Plate - I like it, but it's a little too far inside the nose & in some lights doesn't show up well, also, the 3D printed mountings have cracked / split / delaminated, so as I write, there's another two being printed that will move the plate nearer to the front of the car & will be more resilient.
RogueRunners '25 - Epilogue
RR25 - what did we learn?
This was the most complex trip to date. Ten days, three hotels eleven people, but only five doing the whole trip & one of those didn't make it at all due to car trouble.
There were people who arrived after a couple of days due to personal commitments, there were people that left before the end, so it was an ever changing, swirling mix of people who just get on & like driving inappropriate cars. Did newcomers get left out? Did early leavers get ostracised? Of course not, we all just mucked in & had a good time with whoever was there.
That is the joy of the Rogues.The Ecclefechan Hotel choice was a bit of a risk, as the owners hadn't owned it long & were refurbishing it, but they were true to their word on what would be ready for us & although we were the largest party they'd had for the longest period, they were more than up to the task, regularly changing the menu & making sure we were comfortable.
So, was it a success? I came home thinking it was the best RogueRunners trip yet & they've all been brilliant.
RogueRunners '25 - Day 10
So it was that Linda & I stopped at the farm shop, had a last cake & coffee, then bought enormous pork chops for our tea.