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MartynB

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Posts posted by MartynB

  1. Hi Steve

    Thanks for the input. In the meantime I'd also found Denso's article about ND oil 8 and ND oil 12, which lays out the compatibility matrix if you will. ND 12 can support either refrigerant, but R1234 will cause ND oil 8 to polymerise and gum up.

    Seems to me what I put in my original post was wrong and the "old" A132E6349S part is actually Denso part 447260-1019 and is filled with ND oil 8, so is restricted to R134a

    It's unclear what Denso part number the "new" A132E6563H part is.

  2. Hi All,

    I have a very niche query about the A/C compressors used on the V6 cars. There are two part numbers, each using a different oil for lubrication:

    A132E6349S uses PAG46 oil (not sure of the Denso part number)

    A132E6563H uses ND12 oil (This is the Denso part 447260-1019)

    The question is, if I need to replace the second part, can I use the first, given that the system will need a full flush and rebuild prior to recommissioning?

    The dryer will be replaced as a matter of course and I suspect the condenser will also need replacing, due to fall out from the compressor failure. The transfer pipes running through the sill will be replaced, given these leaking caused my problem in the first place, so it should be easy to ensure that there is no residual ND12 in the system if I can indeed drop in a PAG46 lubed part.

    Any informed opinions?

     

  3. Hi all, since my Race Technology DL1 logger in the Caterham has become senile, I'm looking to switch over to AIM plus I'll probably also finally buy the MX2E so I can use RS3 for both cars. However I'm not going to pull the trigger until I've had a good play around with RS3 to make sure all the mad stuff I like to do in RT Analysis I can mostly still do in that. I binned the idea of switching to Racelogic when I had a play with Circuit Tools and realised it was shockingly basic.

    AIM make the Race Studio 3 software available which is great, but don't have any sample data to use with it, so I was wondering if anyone has any data files they would be happy for me to load up and try it out with. Synced video from a SmartyCam would be a bonus, but not at all necessary.

    Cheers

  4. On 13/10/2021 at 14:47, suffolk009 said:

    I have a friend who's fitted those magnetic battery charger connectors to all his cars. He's learnt the hard way that the best place to put them is somewhere around the front grill. Then (assuming you park nose into the garage) when you drive away - forgetting that it's connected - it just detatches itself. No harm done.

    I may have posted this before, but this was my solution. The connector is actually attached to a thin black elastic string that is just enough to pull it away from the paintwork if I forget...

     

  5. Hi David.

    When I did it I made those fillet ramps to avoid hitting the rear valance. Unless you have very low angle ramps, like RaceRamps, you'll need the same.

    From there it's just a load of bolts of various sizes. I'm afraid I can't remember which I needed to remove. I seem to remember that some are just holding parts of the diffuser together rather than it to the car.

    Good luck

    Martyn

  6. It doesn't look impossible, but there would be a few parts needed to retrofit:

    https://www.deroure.com/diagrams.asp?MAK=1&MDL=40&TBL=11923&SMA=&SMO=0&ST=&SC=0

    Hard to be certain that the bolt points are identical (they don't look it), the crash structure has changed part number for the 410 and 350 VIN 11049 onwards, so could be different pick up.

    see https://www.deroure.com/diagrams.asp?MAK=1&MDL=40&TBL=11913&SMA=&SMO=0&ST=&SC=0

    I'm assuming you'd be looking to modify your existing grille, rather than replace with the new 410 etc. grille, which appears to fit from the rear with completely different mounting points...

    https://www.deroure.com/diagrams.asp?MAK=1&MDL=40&TBL=11929&SMA=&SMO=0&ST=&SC=0

  7. Scott is always worth a listen. Such a clear explainer. From my watching I'd say the Atom has quite a different set of behaviours though (consistent with my observations of Atoms IRL). I think George and others covered off what's happening for Wilson nicely and it reminds my of Andy Walsh's "The Wall" exercise, where you arrive at an imaginary 90 degree corner and turn in without braking. The base habit is usually to turn in further and more sharply than the tyre can support, requesting more slip angle than it can give, which pushes you into understeer. About a second later, depending upon the car and the tyre, enough speed is scrubbed off by that understeer for the fronts to bite, which causes often sharp oversteer, without even going near the brake pedal or lifting off in the corner.

    Ahh, found one (not mine) 

    Andy gets you to hold the wheel as lightly as possible to feel where the natural grip is, before the tyre is overwhelmed and the self aligning force drops away.

    Hope that's of some help

    On the drag down the straight, vs the Audi, I agree with Alastair the 350 isn't head and shoulders above a range of other performance cars these days in that scenario. I can't help thinking that at speed you are building quite a bit of drag from open windows. Just a thought.

  8. I think I might be able to offer some info here.

    I have one of these lifts https://www.automotechservices.co.uk/products/as-7630-mobile-scissor-lift/

    1984433030_Screenshot2019-12-19at10_04_47.thumb.png.325bf09c5de17bf8c772b8b70a3da65a.png

    I got it when we started building our Caterham. In a single width garage it made access to the car much easier than static axle stands. As an aside, I actually built a single timber frame to support the chassis rails and cinched everything down to that for stability. Now for working on the Caterham I just use the standard puck style lift pads.

    It's worth knowing there are two basic styles of car scissor lift. Ones like mine that although they have flat decks that end up between the wheels are not really there for lifting most vehicles. Lifting is done with swing-out, sliding arms, which have lifting pads that in turn slide upon the arms. This gives you a large amount of adjustability, very similar to a 2 post lift, but unfortunately obstruct access to the centre of the floor. Less of a problem with an Elise/Exige, but the Caterham likes to keep its gearbox around there ;)

    Please note that the form factor is narrow enough that the decks actually fit completely inside the track of the car, so that the tyres do not drive over the decks at all.

    This does prove a problem with low ground clearance cars. The height of the mechanism when fully flat is 15cm, the Exige splitter is about 12cm. Same story with the Caterham sump. So what I've done is laid two rows of concrete blocks, flat to the floor, to form a shallow "pit" for the lift. I then made a pair of shallow angle ramps to drive up and onto the blocks...

    IMG_2378.jpg.15803cc663bf8a59e7d6c2eb8d5f2e60.jpg

    The second style of scissor lift is very much designed to lift from the decks, using sliding pads on top of the decks.

    Mid-rise-scissor-lift-car-ramp-car-lift-vehicle-lift-automotive-lift-.png.934c0fbc76f82488790aae62fb782432.png

    These are pretty much useless for either a Seven or a Lotus, unless you were extremely lucky on the precise dimensions of the decks. These lifts, as you can tell from the flap down ramps, are so wide that the car drives over the decks. These are fine for normal cars though, with jackable steel sills.

  9. Ah, Interesting. That does seem to be where the noise is coming from, but I think we all know that these noises can be really deceptive.

    So am I understanding right that you removed the soft-top "Latch Plates" and installed the tape between those and the painted side of the roll hoop cover bodywork? In that case I guess there was no need to remove the trim under the roll hoop, right?

    Thanks

  10. On 25/01/2019 at 03:57, notabene said:

    I was collecting my exige on wednesday, driving it home 900km, on Corsa tires, in -10C and when I was going to refuel Fuel cap broke. I read that its common issue. Is there any solution? In mine only Black part is broken

    If you don't mind buying a spare cap into the deal, this might be an option... 

    http://www.hangar111.com/shop/lotus-exige-s2-s-replacement-parts/640-official-lotus-genuine-fuel-filler-cap.html

    I'd offer to print you a new part in nylon, but I doubt it would be strong enough to last.

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