Awesome attention to details Chuck. Always a perfectionist.
Please keep posting !!
Regards Brian
Please keep posting !!
Regards Brian
All good points, well taken. I tell folks I am following in Ryan's foot steps since none of these projects would have ever been started without his input. Indeed, I consider myself very fortunate.Very nice details !! For you, it is what we do WITH our kids. I would have loved to have my father involved. He was a strickler for details. He built RC planes with amazing detail. He would then go crash whatever he just built. He had diabetes real bad and couldn’t see so he had no idea what the plane was doing. But it never stopped him from repairing and building a new one. His glasses had trifocals in the bottom, and bifocals in the top. He would look through the slit in between. Then he wore jewelers glasses on top of them when building. Enjoy the time with your son while he wants to be involved.
My Grandkids could care less one way of the other, and I have some cool stuff. Sorry that they are being left out.
Regards Brian
Good point. If someone did a cost / benefit analysis this project would get cut from the list. Your approach will provide access to virtually everything one would ever need to access. Indeed, getting into the project, it is apparent that some additional bracing will be needed to make up for the rigidity lost when the rear clip is separated.Territory that I’m too scared to venture into, but I have full confidence in your build skills and I’m looking forward to seeing your process.
I have the same concerns in regard to maintenance, but so far I think I have devised a way to make a lot of the rear end accessible via removing the rear wheels and having the inner fender panels attached with Rivnuts or bolts for reasonably easier removal. Also, the updated fuel tank supports can be unbolted and lowered in a worse case scenario.
Fun is the name of the game. And I would imagine that if it ultimately proves too impractical to have the boot/butt of the car on a hinge type setup like the original, it can be mounted on a sub-frame so it can just be detached and removed completely should the need arise.But I am having fun with this project, and after all it is a hobby, so we will see how it ends up. Hope to post some more progress updates shortly.
You raise a good point. I have never seen an original D with the rear clip opened up as if hinged. I am fairly certain that it was designed to be removable, not opened up on a "hinge". Most had their exhaust under the body and the exhaust system would have to be removed to afford clearance when opened on the "hinge." Add to that the rubber fuel cells and the fuel filler complicating a hinged arrangement.Fun is the name of the game. And I would imagine that if it ultimately proves too impractical to have the boot/butt of the car on a hinge type setup like the original, it can be mounted on a sub-frame so it can just be detached and removed completely should the need arise.
Yes indeed, those do look like screws. Other pics show larger head Dzus style fasterners, which is what will likely go on our D Type.I could be wrong of course but these look like flat head screws to me, some really nice pictures on this site below.
No apology needed! Yes indeed, those are the rear supports for the clip. Those two joints carry much of the weight.Just wondering if these are pivot points for the rear bodywork? Apologies for hijacking your thread
https://www.broadarrowauctions.com/vehicles/am25_r086/1954-jaguar-d-type-okv-2-works-competition
https://www.dkeng.co.uk/restorations/102/Previously_Restored_Cars/jaguar_d_type.html