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Pete Ashby

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Posts posted by Pete Ashby

  1. You will need the proper belt adjusting arm as well, the arm comes in three parts the outer arm that clips onto the generator, the inner arm that is fixed to the front engine plate and the slider clip that locks the two arms together. You will also need the tension spring and the shouldered adjusting bolt and nut. This is all available from the usual dealers for not a lot of money.

    The links you posted show the way everything fits together with the exception of the large flat washers between the generator lugs and rubber bushes and the head of the mounting bolts and rubber bushes. These are nearly always missing as they are such a pain to fit but if you don't fit them the face of the rubber bushes can be damaged with time. Search the G503 for a discussion on mounting the washers correctly.

     

    regards

     

    Pete

  2. Dave

     

    I would strongly recommend you join the G503 forum and use the search engine in the technical knowledge section, there are pictures and words aplenty about fitting jeep dynamos. Basically you need two rubber mounts, two shouldered bolts two large flat washers to fit the shoulder on each bolt and two large flat washers to fit the threaded portion of the bolts, two spring washers to fit the threaded bolts and two nuts. All this is available from a number of suppliers as a kit.

    Fitting can require the need for three hands or two people one underneath and one above. If you are doing this with the wing on, you can make life a bit easier if you supper glue the washers that go between the dynamo casing lugs and the rubber mount onto the rubber mount after installing the mount but obviously before installing the dynamo just make sure the holes line up.

     

    Pete

  3. First things first,

    is the new oil pump distributor drive the same dimensions as the old one ? obvious question I know but worth checking side by side and measuring all the relevant dimensions also check that the drive slot in the pump is the same size as the drive tongue on the distributor.

    Let us know what you find

     

    Pete

  4. Fair point Tony,

    the current Jeep I've just finished is very original except I've put a lot of new mechanical components onto it and the British Army rebuilt it to class 1 in 1952 so your point stands. Having said that I think there is a line in the sand that can be crossed and totally new look alike jeeps crosses the line for me.

     

    Pete

  5. It's a kit car plain and simple,..... if it floats your boat fine.........do I like the idea?, not a lot, but it's a free world.

     

    For me it falls into the same problematic area that vintage Hot Rods fall into as they demonstrate a really impressive amount of skill and work however, I'm left feeling the car would have been better restored to original condition. The car bears a passing resemblance to the original but that's where it stops and for me it's the same issue with the reproduction jeeps on the market.

     

    Pete

  6. Welcome Tom, Gordon has just about covered all the main points that you need to know for starters. I would just add it would be worth you joining the Maple Leaf Up CMP forum most CMP collectors around the globe can be found on this site.

     

    regards

     

    Pete

  7. The situation regarding FJ policy with MV's seems very confused as evidenced by my own experience and the comments in this thread.

    The company are still advertising in the relevant periodicals and as some one else pointed out actually use a picture of a jeep in the adverts. However when I phoned with what I thought to be a dead easy quote for a GPW fully UK registered and on the road I received a very cool response along the lines that FJ no longer dealt with military vehicles, I voiced surprise particularly regarding their continued advertisement, the person I was dealing with put me on hold then came back and said that they would make an exception this time and would be prepared to quote on this occasion. This all seemed very retrograde and not unlike it used to be before specialist insurance became a recognized off shoot in the motor insurance world.

     

    I'd lost all confidence by this point and I went elsewhere, Adrian Flux as it happens, where I got fast efficient service and a good price from a rep who was switched on, asked all the right questions and knew exactly what I was trying to insure.

    It occurs that perhaps FJ would benefit from a clear policy decision regarding there position in the market both to their phone representatives and not least prospective customers.

     

    Pete

  8. Like a lot of us I insured all my vehicles, British, Canadian and US with Footman James for years and they have had a fair sum out of me over the years for the privilege. This year I got a very grudging response from them when I wanted to add a jeep it was very much as if they were doing me an extreme favor and were pretty mealy mouthed about it. I went elsewhere and got a better price and deal and will not return.

     

    Pete

  9. Fair question Terry and as old as restoration itself. No official line in the MV world, but one that maybe becomes more important as the price of vehicles continue rise, this certainly exercises minds in the classic/vintage racing world.

    I'll be interested to see what sort of response your question gets this time round.

    regards

     

    Pete

  10. Interesting conclusions Don, one question occurs, did you keep the original cam profile and if so at high revs was valve bounce an issue ?. I'm impressed with the 74.7mph top speed with the screen down, I think I would have to wear my best brown corduroy driving pants if I was behind the wheel :-D. There are additional issues with increasing the overall road speed of course, not least the handling characteristics which at even at design speeds can be unpredictable on some road surfaces. Still as an engineering exercise interesting.

     

    Pete

  11. Pete/Richard,

     

    Did you never reply when Chris said to you:-

     

    What do you f*****g want that old rubbish for ? He is a sadly missed character.

     

    Regards,

    David.

     

     

    Good morning David and Happy New Year to you,

     

    stock answer was 'I might find a use for one day' even if it was like gold dust which was the case when I found a mint condition cab tilt for my Retriever in a pile of canvas at the back of the goods shed and out came the immortal line.

     

    Certainly a man of the old school direct and to the point, some found him difficult to deal with and some people he would not do deal with at any price, but I never had a problem. I first met Chris at the age of 16 at one of John Carters Shotersbrook shows Phil Passey introduced us, another of the old school no longer with us along with the likes of Joe Hurst from St Mary Bourne, Joe tried to convince Keith Orpin and I that we should buy a Diamond T ballast tractor on the road for about £500.00 delivered........... those were days.

     

    Regards

     

    Pete

  12. That is Chris Wilkinson's yard at the old railway goods station in St Albans

     

    There were crates of tank engines everywhere, a real treasure trove!

     

    Certainly was Richard, some choice stuff came out of that yard, I remember on one visit in the late 70,s Chris trying to persuade me that I really wanted an AEC armoured car, I think it was a choice of three, all I was after was a jeep layshaft.

    Fool that I was I wasn't persuaded, I some how think the AEC would be worth more than a jeep now :-(.

     

    Do you remember the Cadalac tank engines that had been Nos in crates, just heaps of melted Aluminium after one of several fires on the premises?. Did Chris ever show you the photos of NoS jeep and Dodge parts in crates stacked 10 feet high on the goods shed loading ramp? Happy days it was always a good day out at St Albans.......you don't get yards or people like that any more.

     

    Pete

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