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Everything posted by pethier
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When I had a live-axle 1979, it was not about the power, it was about the cornering. I'm an autocross freak. Now that I see the deDion setup, I see it is much more robust for lateral location. I intend to put my Zetec in and I think the setup is up to it. I don't expect to put huge wheels on it. The 6.5 x 15 Prisoner wheels should do fine, though I did like the 7 x 15 Panasport wheels I had for my 1979 car.
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I don't think that would clear the fuel tank on my 1979 car. All in all, I'm happy to have the deDion setup on my 1991.
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It goes on. After May belts in, he isn't sharp enough possess the key and Clarkson does it to him again.
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Since my maintainers are all only 1 amp (or maybe some are 1.5) I think I'm OK with my AGM batteries.
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You were pushing the finger-in-the-ear and corner-of-the-mouth a bit, eh? Or didn't your CO use that standard?
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Obviously, he does not know how to take off the roof.
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I thought I was a member. Must have missed the notice to renew. Only the two Caterhams I described were/are mine. I sold the yellow one to a gentleman on Cape Cod. It now has been passed on.
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My first Caterham was a 1979 1600 Kent with twin Dellorto carbs, yellow with green center stripe. Current Caterham came to me all Ford Moonstone Blue. I have had the nose and fenders redone in Caterham Firecracker Yellow. This thread is for non-Sevens, but you can view an album of my Caterham stuff at https://www.flickr.com/photos/pethier/albums/72177720312826035/
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I spent the late 1960s and early 1970s as the #1 grid marshal at Donnybrooke/BIR (and sometime nobody-special grid marshal at Road America). I was present at many CanAm races in the midst of these cars. At Donnybrooke/BIR I was always at the front of the grid and thus got the full audio experience of every car that started the race. I have absolutely no idea why I am not deaf. (The spell-checker does not recognize the spelling of Donnybrooke. It thinks the track was named for the suburb of Dublin. Nope. It was named for Donny Skogmo and Brooke Kennard, two gentlemen who had died at Road America.)
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They paid me 100 bucks to drive a Slingshot on a track before it was marketed. They would not tell me who made it, what they were going to call it, where the engine was, what the engine was or anything else about it. I told them I thought a Seven would be a better deal, partially because 3-wheelers are not generally allowed on autocross tracks.
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So, tell us a little about yourselves
pethier replied to slngsht's topic in General Sevens Discussion
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So, tell us a little about yourselves
pethier replied to slngsht's topic in General Sevens Discussion
It's not how tall you are, it's how long your legs are. I can tell you a fairly-boring story about how some BMW promotional people ignored me pointing this out and caused a ridiculous situation in their ridiculous competition. I am 5'8". I have Caterham black-leather bucket seats in my car. I drive with the seat well-forward on its tracks. I do sit a bit tall in the saddle. OK, I have shorter legs than people expect. I knew a guy named Duane Johnson (actually I knew several guys named Duane Johnson, including a guy who changed his name to Duane Warren because there were just too-damned-many Duane Johnsons about) who was way shorter than I but had longer legs. Duane built us a single-seater out of my old SAAB parts. When he put the seat in to suit him, I could not reach the pedals and the roll bar was too short. We solved that by making the seat re-positionable so I was in the "Lotus position" and he sat upright. I suggest you get the bucket seats with seat tracks unless perhaps you always drove your Elise with the seat all the way back. BTW, I just turned 75. -
This photo was shot at Road America. I drove it there from the Twin Cities and it shows the dead bugs to prove it. It actually has the Bridgestone autocross tires on it here. Since then I have picked up a set of twist wheels for a set of "Porsche approved" Michelin all-weather tires.
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I have a 987.2 Cayman. Love it as a 3-season car. I'm going to put it to bed for the winter in about 10 minutes. I could drive it through the winter, but why? My F-150 4x4 will be fine as a winter vehicle. The Cayman has the 2.9 with the reputation for reliability. I purposely got one with the PDK because I figured it was about time I tried a dual-clutch. I like it a lot. I swapped out the steering wheel for the Sport wheel with proper paddles. The shifts are lightning-fast and solid when in the Sport Plus mode. So unlike conventional automatics. It's a great cruiser and fun at autocrosses when the weather is not Seven-friendly.
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I still don't understand how a pad wears concave.
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Glad to hear that avonNOVA ( I like palindromes too) are currently concentrating on hillclimb tires, since they are the ticket for USA-stye autocrossing a Caterham. The Yokohama 052 works well-enough for a dual-purpose street/autocross tire on a Caterham, but it does not not give the stick of an Avon hillclimb tire. I could not heat Hoosier A7 tires autocrossing my Elise, so I can't imagine they would work any better with a Caterham.
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I see what you did there.
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The cupping of the pad looks very weird. I don't see how it's possible.
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Shoot. I am a member, but in the USA.
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I would never consider splitting the calipers. I had this sort of calibers on my Europa. I was able to remove the pistons and replace them with stainless pistons without splitting the calipers.
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I have now actually done this. The spacer is 1.6" thick. See this Flickr album and read the album description. https://www.flickr.com/photos/pethier/albums/72177720321594711/
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I think the doors are hinged so they fit in the boot. But I did discover the "elbow the bottom" trick one day when I was concerned about driving into rain, but it was not all that cold. I did not get my French-Canadian father's skin. Got the melanin-deprived Irish skin from my mother. I have the top on essentially all the time for shade or rain. I don't put on the doors unless weather demands it. My top has a zip-open rear window. With this feature, I have no need of a half-hood. I'm 74 years living and 5'10". I went to lot of trouble to make my steering wheel removable, but nearly all the time I need not remove it. I use the in/out techniques learned in the 1970s and it still works for me.
