bigstraight6 Posted May 18, 2020 Posted May 18, 2020 I got the Triumph up and running at the end of last week since it had sat dormant in the garage since last September, it started first time easily but protested at this long period of inactivity by bursting its clutch slave cylinder when I attempted to select a gear, an eBay sourced replacement and a bit of spanner twirling soon sorted that and I’m now using the car as my daily, burning lots of the now fairly cheap petrol but it’s all about smiles to the gallon with the glorious exhaust note and driving a proper car. I really have to address some bodywork issues, but I unfortunately don’t possess the skills to do this properly. Both front wheel arches are now quite moth eaten with the dreaded tin worm. This will require repair panels and weldage and I’m trying to find someone who knows what they are doing to sort this. The other smaller bits of grot I will have a go at myself with Vatcan, but I will not attempt any painting with rattle cans after previous disasters, does anyone know where I could get some Valencia blue coach paint I could brush on for that authentic giffer body repair look as I think I could get away with it in the effected areas... MorrisItalSLX, LightBulbFun, stereotype and 24 others 27
eddyramrod Posted May 18, 2020 Posted May 18, 2020 You're using that as your daily? Hero! You, sir, are a Winnah! bigstraight6, Amishtat and Three Speed 3
wuvvum Posted May 18, 2020 Posted May 18, 2020 20 minutes ago, bigstraight6 said: does anyone know where I could get some Valencia blue coach paint I could brush on for that authentic giffer body repair look as I think I could get away with it in the effected areas... Nice idea, but for an authentic giffer repair you need to use a slightly different shade of blue. Trafalgar should do it. alf892, eddyramrod, bigstraight6 and 1 other 1 3
eddyramrod Posted May 18, 2020 Posted May 18, 2020 It might just be the lighting, but that car doesn't look like it's Valencia Blue now, maybe that IS the giffer shade! I remember Valencia well, for that was the colour of the family Herald that wore my L plates 43 years ago.
SiC Posted May 18, 2020 Posted May 18, 2020 Unlikely to be an exact match due to fading and the like, but Moss do that colour as a touch up or aerosol: https://www.moss-europe.co.uk/shop-by-model/triumph/spitfire/body-chassis/tools-consumables/classic-car-colours-paints-spitfire-53437.html Alternatively try a local car paint supplier. Just make sure they don't try looking at Triumph motorcycle colours. bigstraight6 1
500tops Posted May 19, 2020 Posted May 19, 2020 12 hours ago, bigstraight6 said: I got the Triumph up and running at the end of last week since it had sat dormant in the garage since last September, it started first time easily but protested at this long period of inactivity by bursting its clutch slave cylinder when I attempted to select a gear, an eBay sourced replacement and a bit of spanner twirling soon sorted that and I’m now using the car as my daily, burning lots of the now fairly cheap petrol but it’s all about smiles to the gallon with the glorious exhaust note and driving a proper car. I really have to address some bodywork issues, but I unfortunately don’t possess the skills to do this properly. Both front wheel arches are now quite moth eaten with the dreaded tin worm. This will require repair panels and weldage and I’m trying to find someone who knows what they are doing to sort this. The other smaller bits of grot I will have a go at myself with Vatcan, but I will not attempt any painting with rattle cans after previous disasters, does anyone know where I could get some Valencia blue coach paint I could brush on for that authentic giffer body repair look as I think I could get away with it in the effected areas... Have you tried AM Restorations at Kay Close, Plympton for the body repairs? bigstraight6 1
2flags Posted May 19, 2020 Posted May 19, 2020 The thing I love about cars of this era is the fact you do not need a fully equipped workshop to fix them. The clutch slave cylinder goes. It is bolted to the outside of the gearbox. You can get to it. Undo the union, a couple of bolts, redo the union, quick bleed and you're on your way. Modern 'improved' cars have the slave cylinder inside the bellhousing as part of the release bearing. When it goes, gearbox or engine out. Not a quick roadside repair. Progress? Really? bigstraight6 and Shite Ron 2
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now