Thursday, 26 February 2026
Double Glazed
Tuesday, 24 February 2026
ILLness!
Yes my Girlfriend & I have been ILL.
Not merely "ill", but most definitely ILL. We came back from the west country & started feeling rough soon afterwards, started off like a cold, but it has been evil! My girlfriend has suspicions it may have been bronchitis as she had that a long time ago. I wouldn't be surprised. The previous time we stayed in a Premier Inn we came away with covid.
But I am now on the mend, albeit very slowly. So it probably wasn't wise to spend all day in the garage working then, but that's what I did & have succeeded in adjusting the nearside door quite well & the off side one a bit, as well as more-or-less making a new near side side screen. Being ILL (did I mention that?) I'm perhaps not quite up to par & cut the hole for the cockpit vent too big, yes I did measure it twice, still loused it up. However a grommet printed in clear polyurethane adapts the hole size as well as stopping the vent rattling & making the opening action feel far more positive, so no harm done.This it pretty much a straight re-make, the old ones are a strange sort of clear plastic, they were originally bolted to the doors - which is standard for the kit, but I took them off so I can swap them for small deflectors, but they are heavy, getting a bit clouded & have never fitted the soft top particularly well. Since the photo I've trimmed the top & rear faces & just need to drill a few holes for the "furniture" - the latch & the ball mount for the control arm that opens the window with the door.
Then I'll make it see through. I've always considered that important in a window.
Wednesday, 18 February 2026
A Trip to Bristol
My girlfriend & I are collecting Concordes, not to keep you understand, that would be - inconvenient. It started when we went to Brooklands on our first date & we have now been aboard four.
To accomplish this we went to "Aerospace Bristol", it looked a bit "corporate" to me from the website, but it was actually very good, telling the story of the Bristol aircraft company from before it made aeroplanes (under a different name obviously) until we as a nation gave up on making stuff & just bought it from other countries.
The first "room" covers up to the end of the first world war & has - as you can see a Bristol Fighter & hanging above it, the wooden structure of a Bristol Fighter for comparison, there are lots of displays on making wooden propellers & the other paraphernalia of aircraft production, then as you walk through to the second room there is a model showing the flying controls of an aircraft which is animated as you move them. What I found interesting was that the plane looks like a '30s model of a plane called "Britain First". It was designed for the then owner of the Daily Mail who could see that other countries were developing monoplanes & the UK didn't seem to be, so he asked Bristol to design him a six seater airliner - it was faster than the RAF's fastest fighter & was developed into the Blenheim.In this photo of a sectioned engine the timing wheels that move the sleeves are in a ring just ahead of the removed cylinder - the sleeves are painted yellow.
Saturday, 7 February 2026
Exhaust Fairing
So, starting with a paper pattern, I rough cut the sheet & rolled it to more or less match the sill (over my knee if you must know).
There was then a lot of to-ing & fro-ing, matching the shape & dressing a flare into the rear edge to match(ish) the exhaust can & stiffen the panel a little, also to make sure it covered up the holes in the body punched by a badly located exhaust clamp. Once I was happy, I drilled a number of 3/32" holes & jig-pinned it in place.I polished it up a bit, though not too much, the rest of the car has many many stone chips, so the "patina" of the second-hand sheet is a good thing, after that it was just a case of opening the holes up to 1/8" & riveting it on - it doesn't need to be removeable like the rear one as the silencer comes out backwards. This is as far away as I can get in the garage, when I get a dry day I'll move it outside.
Monday, 26 January 2026
Bodywork
I've always shied away from bodywork, in theory I know the principles of tin-smithery, but having a car made of GRP meant I never had to bash anything into a different shape.
But the Stylus has an embarrassing personal problem which explains why the huge majority of the photos I post show the driver's side.
When Jeremy Phillips designed it, he made the sills big enough to take a silencer, so builders didn't need to spend money on big expensive stainless jobs. However, as you can see, a previous owner on my car did just that & chopped a huge hole in the side to fit it. It's ugly & it looks naff, I've always hated it. Also it pointed at the ground & any car following me got covered in dust from the gutter, blown into the air by "the wind of my passage" (ahem).
So what to do? A number of ideas had suggested themselves over the years, But I have now taken action!The first thing was to bend the silencer bracket so the silencer sat parallel to the body & the tailpipe was nearer horizontal - easy enough, I can bash things about, then I cut a hole for the tailpipe out of a sheet of paper & taped it on the side, marking where the edge of the new fairing panel should be.
The next job was to cut some thin aluminium sheet to match(ish) the paper template & form it to the curve of the sill. I also knocked a flange into the free edge a/ to make it stiffer & b/ because it looks cool.
After that I had to fiddle & faff with it, cutting some away here, changing the curvature there until I was happy with the fit.
Then I took a brave pill & drilled the body!
I also bonded on a tab at the top front to the inside of the body to bolt the panel to, here you can see the panel's jig-pinned on.
After I was happy with the fit I put riv-nuts into the tab & installed more into the GRP (I slightly squeezed them with tigerseal in the holes as pulling a proper squeeze on riv-nuts in GRP doesn't really work).
So here we are - I can't get far enough from the car for a long shot & I'd like to do something similar at the front, so we'll see how that goes.
There will be "development", I may have to enlarge the tailpipe hole if heat expansion moves the tailpipe back, but I'll deal with that as it happens.
Saturday, 24 January 2026
Airbox - Yes Again!
The airbox on the Stylus has been an ongoing story - not a story of woe I hasten to add, just a story of ideas superseding ideas.
In the beginning the car had sock type filters over alloy trumpets, it works but it means the engine is breathing hot engine bay air, so I got some foam, cut it to make a male mould & made an airbox drawing from a cone filter next to the radiator.
To connect up the hose I used an alloy connector that came with the filter glued into the end of the airbox. It was fine, but after a few years the glue failed & the alloy connector was rattling about.
I hit upon the idea of 3D printing a circular seal which was basically N cross section so the outward facing groove would fit into the edge of the box & the inward groove would fit over the connector flange.
AND IT WORKED!
But (you knew there'd be a "but") the connector sticking out of the angled end of the airbox put the hose very close to the edge of the bonnet aperture & the underside of the bonnet - it looked awkward & I don't like awkward.
So then I thought If I re-designed my seal / retainer, I could have the connector angled downwards, which would make the hose route straighter & take it away from the bodywork.
It looked good, but then I thought - the alloy connector is now swinging off the end of a rubber thing just hooked into a flexible composite box, why am I using it at all?
Back to the drawing board.
The next iteration did away with the alloy connector & just put a bead on the end of the printed thing. I would be using the harder polyurethane, so the hose would still clamp on & yes, a little weight saving, less components, less airflow disruption - marginal improvements I'll grant you, but better is better.Thursday, 15 January 2026
Wipers Fixed
So I removed the dash top - skinning several knuckles - removed & measured the angled sleeves & printed a couple of prototypes. That all seemed to work OK, the spindles sat perpendicular to the screen, so I re-printed the sleeves in polyurethane, I have two hardnesses, so I printed the face the nut screws onto in the hard one & mid-print swapped to the soft one for the face that seals to the bodywork.
Having done all that a few times (starting with the wrong hardness, using the wrong print file etc) I had a set of parts that worked & after refitting, I squirted the screen, started the wipers and ........ perfect!
Wipe marks right to the very top of the very middle.
It looks pretty good, so tomorrow I'll put the dash top back on & skin a few more knuckles.























