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AntonyH

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Blog Entries posted by AntonyH

  1. AntonyH
    Augmented version of the article "When is a door not a door?", published in Lowflying, April 2015.
    For those who read it, I'll spare you the terrible joke again, please skip the next line.
    For those who missed the terrible joke, the answer is, "When it's a jar!". It wasn't that funny when I was a toddler.
    Anyway...
    I have a problem with standard sidescreens: The soft plastic is prone to scratching and damage if you stow them in the boot (when you find yourself miles from home on an unexpectedly lovely day); also at junctions, roundabout entries and through climbing right-handers, the framework sits in my sight line.
    So when, early in 2013, I saw a picture of a Japanese Caterham with a frameless piece of glazing attached to the top of a half door, with door hinges bolted directly to the glazing, it set me thinking...
    My first step was to procure a sheet of 3mm (not 4mm as I wrote in Lowflying - brain fade!) clear polycarbonate. Polycarbonate is used for safety glasses and goggles, helmet visors, riot shields, bullet-resistant glazing, etc, so it’s perfect for a sidescreen. It’s also fire-resistant, which I hope will never come in handy. I sourced mine from http://www.polycarbonateshop.co.uk but a search will find a variety of suppliers, with a 1m square sheet being plenty for two SV sidescreens (more like three plus change - polycarbonateshop will also cut a sheet down to your chosen size, but as delivery is a large proportion of the cost you may as well have plenty for experimentation).
    Notes first:
    Be aware that the polycarb "sawdust" created will be small, viciously sharp particles that your jigsaw will fire at you at significant velocity. Decent eye protection is an absolute must.
    Leave both protective films on the polycarb for as long as possible and certainly while ever you're cutting and drilling the sheet. Once you remove it, attempting to make further adjustments with the jigsaw is pretty much guaranteed to scratch the plastic as swarf gets trapped between the jigsaw's baseplate and the polycarb. This will annoy you immensely. Ask me how I know... Pretty much, so long as you've peeled back the edges so they're not trapped, you can leave the protective films on until you've put the completed door back on the car and you're ready to drive away.
    Finally, unlike some plastics, polycarb is not suitable for heating and forming - you're limited to a flat sheet, so you can't (for example) make a profiled wind deflector. **Edit** - This is not strictly true, I have since learned. It can be cold formed with enough force, although will spring back significantly from the bend you attempt to put into it. Additionally it can be heated to assist this if you're very gentle with the application of temperature - too much heat and the plastic will bubble, becoming opaque, which is not much use for a window.
    Method:
    Cut the old glazing out using a Stanley knife (with a fresh blade) - cut as close as possible to the black fabric without touching it. Then, cut the black fabric of the frame itself, at the rear corner and just back from the front top corner (see pictures). Note: Leave an excess length of the edge piping at both cuts; you can use this to provide a neat finish later. I wish I’d thought of that before cutting the first one...
    I left the A-pillar to retain the weather protection between sidescreen and windscreen and because this retains the correct locations for the hinge bolts.

    Next, slice the stitching between the two faces of the sidescreen fabric for a couple of inches from both the remaining ends, such that you can fold these back and get in far enough to cut the steel frame away with a hacksaw. You can get the knife in between the two pieces of fabric to cut the stitching - make sure you do this very carefully!

    With the top and rear of the steelwork removed, reseal the two faces of the fabric using impact adhesive and stitch the edges back together, including the piping you left spare for this. When stitching, don’t try to push the needle through with your thumb - you will get perforated and the needle will bend. Use pliers to hold the needle near the pointy end, push it through and then as soon as you can, pull it from the other side.
    Frankly, at this point, if what you want is a half-door with no glazing but still retaining a comfortable armrest and without the need to fix additional poppers or the like to your car, stop. Your work here is complete.
    However, assuming you want some amount of window too, read on...
    For cutting the polycarbonate, a jigsaw fitted with the finest toothed blade you can find gives a smooth cut edge that doesn’t need much finishing and you can cut tight turns where necessary.
    Initially I made just a quarter light panel, drilled to use the four bolt holes that the hinges use, plus the two holes that the mirror was previously attached through (my mirrors are now on IVA mounts but this should work with door mirrors as well). These are all M5 bolts; obviously you’ll need to replace the old bolts with new, longer ones. IIRC the hinge bolts are originally 12mm; 15mm doesn't appear to be a standard M5 bolt length but 16mm is and that's what I've used all round.


    This was surprisingly good. A half door alone cuts about 75% of the cockpit turbulence you normally get with a windscreen but no doors or roof; the quarter light cuts out most of the rest. After an hour of spirited blatting with it, my face was only just starting to become a bit chilly.

    Note, picture shows the door before I'd sealed the ends of the fabric.
    Back in the workshop (back garden), I cut a full sized panel - well, nearly. A slight miscalculation meant it’s a couple of inches shorter than planned on the bottom edge, at the rear. Whilst measuring up I also fitted the half hood and allowed about half an inch of overlap at the top.
    I drilled two new holes in the metal framework at the (new) top edge of the sidescreen - plenty of care is needed to get these central in the metal strip (that you can’t see...), and also to avoid all the swarf disappearing into the sidescreen. To prevent overly stressing the glazing, I used plastic “top hat” washers through oversized holes for all the bolts along the bottom of the polycarbonate.
    The end result is a much-improved sidescreen that doesn’t deform or scratch anything like as easily when abused, and has no blind spots.
    If you use a full hood you may want to be fussier with the dimensions at the rear, but as we only use a half hood it’s not critical. If I were to remake the glazing I would also make it a fraction taller towards the rear - at higher speeds there’s enough flap in the half hood that the tail end of the glazing sometimes escapes to the outside.

    Note, picture shows the door before I'd sealed the ends of the fabric.
    Overall? Well, at no point in the last year have I thought the factory windows were better in any way, and if I do ever damage the glazing, it’s a few quid and half an hour’s work to replace the panel, rather than the cost of a whole new side screen.
    With just a couple of minutes with an 8mm spanner and an allen key, I can swap between a half door, a half door with quarterlight / wind deflector, or a full door as you'd use with full weather gear, all the while retaining the comfort of the armrest.
    It also gives, I think, a slight improvement to the "look" of the car when the roof's off, because, well, who doesn't like a frameless door window?


    Matching passenger sidescreen to follow...
  2. AntonyH
    Insurance prices and companies is something that always comes up on Blatchat, and it's always a bit of a struggle to find which thread has which information, so I figured I'd put my numbers in a blog post so as to be able to find them rapidly in future.
    So, here's the July 2015 numbers:
    2005 Roadsport SV / 1.8K / 140bhp / 7,000 road miles / fully comp / self+MrsH / garaged / suburbia / licences since 1989 and 1995 / no points / no convictions / one DVLA-aware medical condition / legal fee cover / no track / Caterham owners since 2012.
    Excesses are total / windscreen replacement / windscreen repair, wherever we got that far on the call.
    Company Price Excesses Notes Adrian Flux £205.00 (£100 / £75 / £0)   A-Plan £209.00 (£200 / £80 / £20)   Peter James £212.01 (£150 / £75 / £10) Includes UK breakdown cover plus 35 days EU breakdown cover Glynwood £217.00 (£150 / £90)   Lloyd & Whyte £228.27 (£150 / £90 / £0) 10,000 miles! MSM £275.53 (£150 / £75) 7,500 miles. Includes 3rd party cover for driving other cars. Mirrors NCD on MrsH's sensible car (proof needed) Crosby £282.51 (£150)   REIS £364.89 (£250 / £50) "If you're not going to be using it for track days, ours probably isn't the policy..."
    7,000 miles is the absolute max they'll quote for.
    Osbourne & Sons £371 or more... -- "Can't beat £228, ours starts at £371"
    Anything >5,000 miles is "unlimited mileage"
    Footman James £426.67 (£175)   2gether Insurance* -- -- "Not going to be able to get near £228"
    Frank Pickles -- -- Couldn't quote last year due to two claims on MrsH's sensible car (neither our fault!), so I didn't bother asking this year.  
    *2gether were recommended to me by someone on facebook; the call lasted about 3 minutes until I told the nice lady the renewal I'd been offered was £228, when she said she'd not waste my time any further! I wish Footman James had said the same, that would have saved me 20 minutes.
    It was a tricky choice this year.
    Peter James offered inclusive breakdown cover which would have saved about £35 elsewhere (Autoaid); Fluxy quoted an incredibly good price, with a tiny excess, reasonable screen excess and zero excess on screen repairs (most of the others have a £10 excess); A-plan and Glynwood were both very competitive too, although A-plan's £20 screen repair excess counts against them, as we've needed 2 repairs in the prior 3 years.
    7,000 miles seems to be a sticking point for some insurers; for REIS it's the absolute limit of road mileage they'll cover, and therefore "it's loading the premium up"; another of the cheapest four gave me a great price for 7,000 (as you can see) but similarly couldn't give me a price at all for 10,000. I can't remember who that was now, sadly.
    In the end, Lloyd & Whyte have my business again, partly due to the hassle-free way they just handled a stone chip repair; mostly for the fact their policy includes a ridiculous 10,000 miles - which I won't get close to, but I might get near to 7,000 this year so that massive headroom means piece of mind. Who knows, it might also open up the option of a European road trip?
  3. AntonyH
    Insurance prices and companies is something that always comes up on Blatchat, and it's always a bit of a struggle to find which thread has which information, so I figured I'd put my numbers in a blog post so as to be able to find them rapidly in future.
    So, here's the July 2014 numbers:
    2005 Roadsport SV / 1.8K / 140bhp / 5,000 road miles / fully comp / self+MrsH / garaged / suburbia / licences since 1989 and 1995 / no points / no convictions / one DVLA-aware medical condition / legal fee cover / no track / Caterham owners since 2012.
    Showing Company: Price (Excess / Windscreen replacement excess)
    Lloyd & Whyte: £153.66 (£150 / £90w)  Peter James: £205.67 (£150 / £75w) Footman James: £217.02 (£100 / £75w) Crosby: £217.57 (£100 / £75w) A-Plan: £245.82 (£200 / £80w) Osbourne and Sons: £305.09 (£200 / didn't ask) MSM: £356.09 (£150 / £75w) REIS: £376.08 (£250 / £50w) Adrian Flux: £380.00 (£150 / £75w) Classic Line: £443.99 (£150 / £75w) Frank Pickles: Wouldn't quote due to two recent claims on MrsH's sensible car, neither of them our fault. I've heard a rumour that Frank Pickles no longer offer Caterham insurance; clearly based on the above that isn't bothering me any.
  4. AntonyH
    **DISCLAIMER** - I have no automotive qualifications. This blog is a record of my actions, not a list of instructions. You cut into your wiring looms and mess with safety-critical components entirely at your own risk.
    Well... my Better Rear Lights Project now completed, attention turns to the front end.
    Why? Mostly because they need some TLC and the weather's awful. The list of "issues" at the front end includes but is probably not limited to:
    Nearside headlight cowling cracked where the retaining bolt goes through it (also, some rust on the retaining tab at the bottom); Offside headlight bowl wobbles on its rivets as these aren't closed up properly; Offside indicator pod is falling apart to the extent that only one bolt now retains the flasher itself (a zip tie runs through the other two holes); All retaining bolts for both flashers, such as remain in situ, are rusted solid; Offside flasher installed with 90 degree rotation, meaning the "drain" gap in the rubber is not at the lowest point, but half way up one side, meaning the metalwork inside has more corrosion than you might want. Also, a couple of years back I removed the indicator repeaters from the wings and put them into the headlight bowls - a great improvement from the driver's point of view, as they're now visible and therefore much less likely to be left running after a manoeuvre, but when I did this I did a cut / solder / heatshrink job on the repeater cable each side, rather than remaking the 6-way econoseal plug. It's worked fine ever since and I believe I did a good job, but solder joints are always at some risk of failing.
    Quite some time ago I sourced (from blatchat) a replacement "pair of black headlights". That's in quotes because clearly, originally one was chrome and one not, and they've been sprayed or powdercoated at some point to become a matching pair. I know this because the black is starting to flake off both in the usual places... Hmm. Nothing a decent powder coat couldn't sort out, I'm sure.
    I also decided to replace the plastic indicator mounts with shiny carbon ones from Carbon Mods, because... er... mostly just "because carbon". NB. It's possible that link may fail shortly, apparently parent company Easy Composites will be relaunching / re-aliging the Carbon Mods brand soon. Anyway, they're very nice, and at less than double the cost of the standard plastic ones (£28.80 plus delivery for a pair from Caterham Parts vs £51.01 plus delivery for the carbon ones), I figured I could justify the extra £20.

    Shiny...
    They're very nice and weigh roughly bugger all. I'm a little worried that the reduction of mass over the front axle might lead to excessive understeer, although I reckon I can compensate by making my right foot heavier.
    In order to minimise the changeover time, I figured I'd build up the new lights so as to be able to do a quick swap, rather than attempting to canibalise and re-use parts for the sake of saving a few quid. So, I also bought a new pair of repeaters to fit into the new bowls. There's plenty to choose from, in the end I went for a pair of neat little LED lights from eBay seller "boltonbits":
    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/390833492409
    You can get these and similar lights from other places, but £11.98 delivered for the pair was substantially the cheapest price I could find. Unfortunately, the first pair arrived with glue that hadn't set, so there were various sticky smears of glue all over the cables, lights and mounting grommets - not great. However, BoltOnBits were excellent, took them back, refunded my return postage cost (and a bit) and sent out replacements very rapidly.
    Additionally, the headlights connect to the loom via a 6-way econoseal per side. Plenty of sellers out there obviously and I found mine from eBay again, from seller wheel_spacers_uk - they seemed to be charging less for a full connector set than others wanted for just the plug...
    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/271674203749
    Following a comment / recommendation by revilla on Blatchat thread "improving the headlights", I've also gone for a pair of Cibie 7" reflector units, from Demon Tweeks' alter ego JJC Race and Rally, also via eBay:
    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/371168061389
    These *should* be a straight swap for the standard reflectors and apparently give a much improved beam pattern and therefore make night driving less painful. We'll see...
    Finally, a new pair of flashers, because the old ones are a bit manky and who knows what damage I might do to them whilst cutting off the rusted bolts. Here's a handy tip: Don't spend £33.60 plus £10 delivery on a pair of indicators from Caterham! Land Rover Defenders use (or used, up to 1995) indicators of exactly the same size - maybe even from the same production line - and you can get a pair off eBay for £8.85, delivered:
    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/271489916974
    Wait a minute... (33.60 + 10.00) - 8.85 = 34.75. So I've saved more on the indicators than I spent on the carbon pods (above the cost of plastic ones) to mount them on. Result! 
    Thanks to Mavic82 for pointing out this commonality of sizing on his blatchat thread "DRL solution & LED H4 bulbs with video".
  5. AntonyH
    **DISCLAIMER** - I have no automotive qualifications. This blog is a record of my actions, not a list of instructions. You cut into your wiring looms and mess with safety-critical components entirely at your own risk.
    As ARs, we find ourselves leading more blats than many people. As such, various members have on occasion mentioned that our rear lights (the standard Caterham caravan lights) can be difficult to see clearly in certain conditions and at some specific times of day.
    Unfortunately those conditions appear to include bright and clear days, overcast days, changable days, low light, fog, rain and light mist; and the times are specifically when the sun is low in the sky, high overhead, below the horizon, or at some point in between.
    In short, the standard lights are a bit crap.
    Various iterations have been tried, from the standard red/orange cluster lenses with clear filament bulbs, clear lenses with amber indicators and red LED stop/tails, bigger and brighter LED stop/tails, silvered plastic reflectors within the clusters, silver reflective vinyl in the clusters, etc. - all to no particular avail.
    So, the search was on for some significantly better rear lights, that either looked similar to the originals or, if different, different in a good way.
    There's various rectangular LED lights, panels and clusters out there from various suppliers (carbuildersolutions, SVC, eBay etc) but I personally felt that none of the "nearly but not quite the same shape" rectangular options were quite right, somehow. Not close enough to be a direct replacement, but not different enough to look like anything more than a poor attempt at a copy. It's hard to describe but for whatever reason, none appealed.
    Eventually I found some interesting looking units on www.kitcarsupplies.co.uk (formerly Seven Speed) based around a 95mm round light unit form.
    **EDIT** Sadly, kit Car Supplies has since ceased trading, it appears. I can still find the light units and housing on Car Builder Solutions, and what appears to be the same reflector (albeit at a higher price) on Leisure Shop Direct. Links modified to suit:
    Triple-purpose stop/tail/indicator:
    http://www.carbuildersolutions.com/uk/redamber-lens-led-stop-tail-and-indicator-95mm-dome "Shotgun" housing to fit a pair of round 95mm elements:
    http://www.carbuildersolutions.com/uk/angled-twin-round-lamp-housing Reflector:
    https://www.leisureshopdirect.com/electric/caravan-rear-lights-and-marker-lights/marker-lights/reflectors/jokon-round-reflector-95mm-dia
    This form factor of 95mm light is available from various sources and in various configurations (i.e. just an indicator, just a stop/tail, a reverse/fog unit, etc) so I thought quite a while about these choices.
    The above housing has no integral reflector, so the options there were to use one slot in each housing for the matching reflector, or to have a different reflector elsewhere which would free up both slots for lights (at the expense of having more holes elsewhere for reflectors which might look a bit bodged). I've always prefered indicators to be separated from tail lights in general, but pictures of the above setup looked better than I imagined twin lights with a different reflector elsewhere might, so I settled on the list above.
    Total spend was to be just about £245:
    1x LED flasher relay at £14.99 NB. See later posts for the trials of getting a working flasher unit...; 2x LED Bullseye Rear Light Unit - Red/Amber Lens at £69.99 each; 2x Shotgun Rear Light Housing - Caterham at £29.99 each; 2x 95mm Reflector at £9.99 each; Shipping at £9.99 I asked Carl Van Baars (Seven Speed / Kit Car Supplies proprietor) for his opinions on the brightness of the lights, on the EU-approved scale of "Are they on?", through "Standard Caterham" and "Visible", up to "Ow my eyes" and finally "New Audi". £245 is a lot of cash to commit to a project without some idea it'll be worthwhile, after all.
    Carl was good enough to phone me back for a chat, before pointing me at a video clip online of the lights on the back of his car. To be honest I watched the clip (a donut at Mulsanne) a few times before I remembered to look for the lights disappearing into the distance, but all in all this was enough to convince me - apart from anything else, amongst the vast array of lights available, these are the lights Carl chose to fit to his own beloved Seven - and the order was placed.
    Note the housing is available in two versions, with a curved back to fit a Caterham arch or a flat angled back to fit a W*******d - make sure you pick the right option!
    Next, sit back and wait for them to arrive...
  6. AntonyH
    It's that time of year again...
    Here are our July 2016 numbers:
    2005 Roadsport SV / 1.8K / 140bhp / 7,000 road miles / fully comp / self+MrsH / garaged / suburbia / licences since 1989 and 1995 / no points / no convictions / one DVLA-aware medical condition / legal fee cover / no track / Caterham owners since 2012.
    Excesses are total / windscreen replacement / windscreen repair, wherever we got that far on the call.
    COMPANY PRICE EXCESSES NOTES Adrian Flux £181.59 (£100 / £75 / £0)   Glynwood £228.00     A-Plan £230.86 (£150 / £90 / £0) 6,000-9,000 mile bracket Peter James £232.65     MSM £236.56   7,500 miles. Relies on mirroring 5+ years NCD on MrsH's tintop. Classic Line £265.86 (£150) 7,500 miles Crosby £278.26 (£250)   Lloyd & Whyte £280.41 (£200 / £80) 5,000-10,000 mile bracket I've had 10,000 miles for the last two years because Lloyd & Whyte were offering such a bargain price it wasn't worth not taking them up. However, we have been within 7,000 miles for the last couple of years, and L&W's previous underwriter has withdrawn from the market.
    As a result, apparently, their quote was up by £50 this year, from last, despite another claim-free year of experience, whilst their excess got a bit worse. The fact they're now the official "Caterham Insurance Services" broker is, I'm sure, irrelevant.
    A-Plan's price was looking excellent had 7,000 miles not been enough; for a mere £15 more they also offered a dizzying 12,000 miles, so worth a look if that's a factor.
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