Monday, 24 March 2025

The Management

 When I put the blacktop Zetec in the Stylus I had a thing in mind, the engine shouldn't look newer than the car.

OK, strictly speaking the engine is the same age as the car, but the car looks late '60s - early '70s, so I wanted the engine to look "appropriate". I took off all the plastic & replaced it with alloy & put the coil pack under the throttle bodies, so the HT leads come up between the intake runners as if it had a distributor. I'd struggled with cable management as however I arranged it, one of the  HT leads or a fuel hose was always rubbing, but in the end I had it how I wanted it.

A couple of years & a few thousand miles & I noticed a rub on one of the HT leads, so I've done some cable management & it's now all clear (again). I've made a new bracket to hold the pair of leads that pass between the first two runners (I made a bracket for the gap twixt second & third last time) so it looks much neater & I have just ordered some bolts to tidy it up further, but inevitably I've now realised I should've made a new bracket that controls all the wires, rather than have one bracket for each pair.

But this will do. Also - can you tell I now have a buffing wheel? 😁

Also in the pipeline is a better throttle cable arrangement, where the cable will pass out through the front face of the pedal box, rather than the top. This will mean the cable doesn't pass the pedal any more, there's will be over a foot less cable, so less drag & the cable outer will only turn through 90deg, rather than 360deg, again reducing cable drag. This is a good thing.


Saturday, 15 March 2025

At Last - Some Proper Engineering

When I bought the Stylus the throttle was VERY sensitive, this made it difficult to drive in the lower gears (it also lacked up & down-stops for the throttle), so I drilled a new hole in the throttle pedal & re-routed the cable to change the ratio of movement between the pedal & the throttle butterflies - I'd done something similar to the Fury, I think it's to do with the throttle bodies being intended for a bike, so operated by a hand throttle - hands are more sensitive that feet, so a higher gearing works.

That's how it's been for the last couple of years, but every time I start driving the car after the winter layup I think I should gear it down more, then I get used to not driving in first gear & forget about it.

But not so this year!

To be honest I've looked at it a couple of times & not seen an easy way to improve it, the throttle pedal bends round the brake bias adjuster limiting the options.

Up-stop cap......
However, yesterday it occurred to me that if I put a "flag" on the pedal higher up, the first part of the movement would be forwards & down as the pedal moved around the pivot point, then increasingly down the further it got pushed, mimicking the "snail cam" on the butterfly shaft. This gives a more precise movement at small throttle openings & more coarse as the pedal is mashed into the bulkhead.


To begin with I tried to make a bolt-on thing from aluminium, but it wasn't going anywhere, so I found a very thick steel square washer left over from the Quantum refurb (NEVER throw anything away!), cleaned off the galvanising & welded it on, then cut lumps off it until it was the right sort of shape. A hole for the cable fork went in & astonishingly when I re-fitted the pedal & adjusted the cable it seemed to work. For a few added improvements I drew up & printed a soft "cap" for the up-stop so the pedal isn't vibrating against it at idle.

.......printed & fitted
I adjusted the the up-stop & found that the down-stop was no longer required, the pedal hit the bulkhead as the butterfly shaft hit it's fully open stop, so the pedal was moving about an inch & a half further for the same butterfly travel - hurrah!


Lower ratio pedal, up-stop & return spring














But of course every silver lining has a cloud & the pedal was now very light indeed. I found a convenient hole next to where the up-stop fits. A brief search recovered a fairly weak tension spring with only one "end" - again, left over from the Quantum. I put a short bolt through the convenient hole & wound the spring onto the flange around the bolt, then hooked the loop on the other end over a new bolt through the original throttle cable hole, so I can adjust the spring by screwing it up & down over the flange but it can't come off or un-adjust itself.

Initially the return spring rubbed against the up-stop bolt cap, but a longer bolt & a couple of control washers sorted that out.

A short test drive confirmed the car is much nicer to drive in the lower gears, not trying to leap away & having to be controlled with the clutch when moving slowly - success!

What's next?

A long soak in a hot bath I think, as spending 1/2 a day with my upper torso buried in a kit car pedal box has taken it's toll. Still, could be worse, at least I have doors I can open to gain access.

Sunday, 9 March 2025

Return Of The Stylus

 Yes the Stylus has returned.

After laying out an obscene amount of money for a year's road tax (£345! - which I wouldn't mind if it had a supercharged small block V8 - but it'll happily do 40+mpg at 70 on a motorway AND it's made from re-used parts!) I took it round to my brothers house through the stationary traffic at M25 Jcn10, then the very next day I took it 115 miles to see my lovely girlfriend. But before that, I tested the various systems, knobs & switches & found the rear fog light didn't work. This was disappointing as it's a switch from a Sea Harrier, but I ordered another couple of switches (standard sort of thing for a car this time) & they had arrived by the time I got home, so after a bit of a fiddle, I replaced both switches & the car is ready for the MoT next month - unless something else breaks.

Here they are - all systems go. Fog light on the left, screen heater on the right, swarf from enlarging the holes underneath.

But, there were no problems in 177 miles, so I'm happy with that.