Project Downward Spiral

Hey Bill if you need a tubing bender for the hard brake lines.. I have a newish Eastwood one that I got years ago that I will loan out to ya to use.. just pm me your addy and I will flat rate it to ya..
 
With a little trimming your XJ will now have full turning radius :D

I love the fact that we played around with your press/bumpstops instead of reading online LOL.

P.S. thanks for the beer.
 
Hey Bill if you need a tubing bender for the hard brake lines.. I have a newish Eastwood one that I got years ago that I will loan out to ya to use.. just pm me your addy and I will flat rate it to ya..
Thanks for the offer! I think once I pay for shipping both ways I might as well just spend the few bucks and get the tool myself. I appreciate the offer though!

I'm looking at either of these (and will probably end up with the $10 one):
http://www.summitracing.com/parts/SUM-900675/?rtype=10
http://www.summitracing.com/parts/SUM-900156/?rtype=10
With a little trimming your XJ will now have full turning radius :D
... and that 1/2" more stretch up front. I'll pull 1/4" off each link end be fine.
I love the fact that we played around with your press/bumpstops instead of reading online LOL.
Haha, yup we got the same number though. :) 7/8" was correct.
P.S. thanks for the beer.
Anytime. I'll have a better selection next time.

Aside from Colin coming over yesterday and lending a hand working out the inner fender clearance issues I went and picked up some valve stems that'll fix my issue with the H1s. The biggest issue is with the rock rings installed I wouldn't be able to fill the tire with air because the stock stem is to long. Then problem lies in that they have an odd rectangular hole for the special CTIS stuff and a normal stem won't work. I picked up some shot fat stubby valve stems and I'll re-drill the wheels to accept them.
 
Bill I got the cheaper of the two you linked at my house. I'm always one for getting new tools myself, but if you don't want to fork out the dough I'll be more then happy to drop mine off.
 
wanna know what I use? gatorade bottles, water bottles, coffee cans. To be completely honest I hate using those benders, super PITA imo. I've never kinked a line either, so :dunno:
 
I use beer bottles to get me in the mood to do brake lines, gotta empty em first. Then I use my thumbs to bend the lines. I considered buying the ten dollar one but it didn't have a 3/16 slot, and if I'm gonna buy something I'm gonna do it right else I'll just wing it without spending money and it'll turn out ok anyways.
 
Im still in the "i can do this with a cheap budget" denial stage of my build.



I have not progressed to full blown "i wanna sell a kidney to be able to afford parts" builders anonymous stage yet.

OK... Fox I am quoting you in my signature... best quote in quite awhile!
:roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::cheers:
 
Ok updates…
As a couple of you know I had a slight issue with the drive flanges I had. After I got my RCV shafts in I tried the drive flanges I got in from Summit Machine (which was over a year ago). Well getting the slug on the shaft wasn’t going to happen. It seems like there must have been a problem broaching the slugs I got; they were not going to go over the shafts. I was a little worried as I’ve had the slugs sitting around new in the box for awhile now. I gave Mike at Summit Machine a call and explained the issue. He hadn’t had any problems with the slugs in the past, but since the time of my order he had changed suppliers. I won’t mention the old supplier’s name. Anyway, he told me he now sources the slugs from Jack at CTM and they are now made from 300M. Mike was kind enough to have a pair of slugs dropped shipped to me. I thought that was pretty cool and a stand up thing to do. Yet again Summit Machine goes the extra mile for their customers.

The new CTM slugs came in today and the difference is huge. They slip right over the splines like they should and the finish work is top notch. They are exactly what you’d expect with a product bearing the CTM logo.
New versus old slugs (CTM on left, “other” on the right):
CTMvsOtherSlug.jpg


They way they are supposed to fit down:
CTMSlug_RCVShaft2.jpg


CTMSlug_RCVShaft1.jpg


Ok, back to progress. I spent most of the day this past Saturday working on my H1s. I went to the shop, setup the outer halves of the wheels on a sine plate and plugged a 5/8” end mill down through where the original H1 valve stem mounted. Awesome, tore the setup done, cleaned up and then checked the fit. My mistake. The new holes worked great, except that the thickness of the H1 wheel was too great and didn’t allow the valve stem to be properly inserted. :( So I set everything back up and grabbed a piloted counter bore end mill and proceeded to counter bore each opening so that the valve stem had a proper fit. Excellent. Minor setback, but what originally took about an hour ended up taking three.


I forgot to snap pictures of the new holes, but the above paragraph should give you a clear picture as to what they look like. Here’s a shot of the new vs old valve stems. In case anyone wants to grab the same stems, the part number is TR415. For those of you who have never seen the odd H1 valve stem before, this shows the weird rectangular mount.

RubbervsH1ValveStems.jpg


Then I cleaned up each outer edge of the rims, prepped the rock rings I’ve had for months and welded them on. I shot the wheels with a flat black. I wanted to paint the rings the same red as the cage and leave the center black, but after thinking over it for a few minutes I went all black for two reasons. One; too much red. Two; the red would be a lot tougher to touch up after smacking them with rocks than the flat black. I’m actually glad now, they look killer.
H1_RockRingsInstalled.jpg


Then I moved one to the seat mounts. If anyone remembers from awhile back I reconstructed the slider on the driver’s side so that it wouldn’t interfere with the trans tunnel. It worked great in theory, but not in practice. The problem lied in the fact that I had moved the slider to underneath the middle of the seat. Now being that it is a suspension seat it travels up and done. After getting in and out a few times I noticed that just sitting in the seat caused the bottom to almost contact the slider. One little bump and without a doubt I’ve be hitting it. Now something I want to do to those seats, let alone my back coming down on something hard. So I did what I should have done in the first place, got rid of the slider on the driver’s side. I’m not really even sure why I messed around with it in the first place as I’ll be the only one every driving it anyway, so why would I need a slider?

A few minutes with the drill press and angle grinder and I turned out these. Not the prettiest thing, but they’ll work and be hidden under the seat anyway. I did drill a few holes so that if I wanted to I could move it back and forth a little bit without having to re-weld anything. I also took a little off the middle to clear the seat nicer.

RedoneSeatMounts1.jpg


RedoneSeatMounts2.jpg


Sometime in the middle of all that I also finished folding back the pinch seem on both the driver’s and passenger’s side front fenders. That’s it for now. Work continues.
 
again sick customer service from summit, cant with to beable to order my flanges, also nice wheels bill, but there still not as cool as mine
 
can't wait to see all this crap tomorrow :D :thumbup:
 
sooo... umm yea.. this update thing would really make me happy about now :D haha


no but really any progress?
Not much picture worthy. Saturday I spent most of the day doing ball joints in my truck. Then Sunday I went wheelin'.
I did spend most of the night tonight playing with some cardboard, tube, a protractor and Colin's winch trying to figure out a good plan for a front bumper. I think I finally got something I like. I'm going to sleep on it, think about it all day tomorrow, then get started on the middle section tomorrow night. I won't complete the ends until I get the fenders and whatnot figured out. That won't come until I order and complete the steering.

Get all that? :confused1
 
How'd the brake stuff work out for ya?
Haven't bought it yet. ;) I expect it to work out good though.
I won't be able to grab the parts for a few weeks anyway, I just did something I haven't done since I started this build. I put something on the CC that I don't have the all money up front to cover it. :shiver: I want to get this thing moving and without dropping some coin on the steering it'd be sitting with not much work to do. I refuse to purchase anything else till I get that paid for.

Colin (MoparManiac) came by tonight and we stripped what was left of the front of my Jeep. The A/C and fuel evap are gone as well. I was planning on using the radiator I had, but upon closer inspection, it's toast. :( I guess I'll have to grab that CSF 3-row sooner than I thought.
 
I've got a radiator for an open cooling system sitting in a friend's garage. It's probably going to have to go into his MJ soon but with winter temps it's running fine, if you need it now I can probably swipe it and you can get a decent junkyard radiator to me anytime between now and when the last snow melts.
 
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