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Second study in brown

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  • Second study in brown

    OK. Here's the second set of six images on the car fettling theme. Stir any memories?

    I've got 12, so enough to make a calendar :-)



    Pete
    Look, I'm an old man. I shouldn't be expected to put up with this.


    Pete's photoblog Misleading the public since 2010.

  • #2
    Re: Second study in brown

    Wow, a Gunsen's Colortune, I'd forgotten all about those.

    Oh and we've got the weather you need for your Subaru Pete. We got 3 inches of wet snow overnight on top of the 6 inches already on the ground. This morning we got a mix of rain and more wet snow which is now freezing.
    It's the image that's important, not the tools used to make it.

    David M's Photoblog

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    • #3
      Re: Second study in brown

      Nice work they should go together well.

      Originally posted by David M View Post
      Wow, a Gunsen's Colortune, I'd forgotten all about those.
      I have owned or have all but a colortune
      OMD E-M1ii MMF3 8-25 f4 Pro 40-150 f2.8 pro MC-14 12-40 pro 14-42 EZ 9-18 f4.0 -5.6 40 -150f4-f5.6 R Laowa 50mm f2.8 macro Sigma 105 f2.8 macro Holga 60mm plastic Holga pinhole lens lens and an OM2sp

      I nice view does not mean a good photograph. My FLickr

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      • #4
        Re: Second study in brown

        Hi Pete,
        I think this is a brilliant idea for a calendar. I do think the first set were better than the second set, they seemed more striking, but they are all good and I am sure your friend will enjoy the gift.
        Shirley
        Shirley
        www.shirleyhollisenterprises.co.uk
        www.photographsbyshirley.co.uk

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        • #5
          Re: Second study in brown

          Good idea for a calendar; I could probably do one with bits that have either broken or dropped off the Landrover over the years, oh and I've still got a Colourtune myself.
          Best Regards
          Bill

          The nearest I have to a home page.
          http://www.flickr.com/photos/peak4/

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          • #6
            Re: Second study in brown

            Ah, feeler gauges for adjusting the tappets, no workshop should be without them. Next you'll be showing pictures of grinding paste for seating new valves into the block after a decoke.

            Maybe we should start a "Show Us Your Tools" thread?
            John

            "A hundredth of a second here, a hundredth of a second there � even if you put them end to end, they still only add up to one, two, perhaps three seconds, snatched from eternity." ~ Robert Doisneau

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            • #7
              Re: Second study in brown

              Tappets? De-Coke. You'll be talking about replacing a fan belt with a stocking next!
              I can remember using a Gunson's Colour Tune on my Mk3 Triumph Spitfire and struggling to get both carbs balanced. Then along came my father and did it in no time at all and by ear!
              He was a fashion designer by profession but restored Aston Martins and Jaguars as a hobby. I could lap in valves and make replacement gaskets from corn flake packets before I passed the 11 +.


              "Always shoot in RAW and avoid JPEGs"

              William Shakespeare.

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              • #8
                Re: Second study in brown

                Hands up those of us who got bored after 15 minutes with the wooden stick hand lapping valves and reached for the Black and Decker
                Look, I'm an old man. I shouldn't be expected to put up with this.


                Pete's photoblog Misleading the public since 2010.

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                • #9
                  Re: Second study in brown

                  Originally posted by snaarman View Post
                  Hands up those of us who got bored after 15 minutes with the wooden stick hand lapping valves and reached for the Black and Decker
                  I wish! I definately wasn't allowed to do that. I served my time in a motor cycle dealership, when engines still had points and tappets or shims. As an apprentice it soon became your job to do the boring valve lapping.
                  Derek

                  ____________________________________________

                  www.dncphotography.co.uk

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                  • #10
                    Re: Second study in brown

                    These are great Pete, looks like they were taken in my dad's shed.

                    I've only once worked on an engine - a Villiers 250cc twin 2 stroke. I ground the head down using grinding paste on a mirror in a futile attempt to make my Franny Barnett go faster. For some reason I still have a set of feeler gauges in the telephone table. Why? I've never ever needed them.
                    John

                    m4/3: E-P2, EM-5, 100-300, 14-42mm 12-50mm, 45mm, panny 14mm. 4/3: 7-14 + Flashes & tripods & stuff

                    "Take nothing but pictures and leave nothing but footprints".

                    Flickr gallery

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                    • #11
                      Re: Second study in brown

                      Pete I really like your images so nostalgic.
                      John you've made me smile with fond memories of my friend Kevin and his Franny Barnett.
                      My parents wouldn't help me financially to get a motorbike but my father brought home a 250cc Royal Enfield Continental GT which some kid had wrecked the engine by thrashing it to death. The deal was "If you can fix it you can have it".
                      Oh happy days.
                      As for using the Black & Decker to lap valves?
                      Shh, only when my father wasn't looking.


                      "Always shoot in RAW and avoid JPEGs"

                      William Shakespeare.

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                      • #12
                        Re: Second study in brown

                        Originally posted by DerekC View Post
                        I wish! I definately wasn't allowed to do that. I served my time in a motor cycle dealership, when engines still had points and tappets or shims. As an apprentice it soon became your job to do the boring valve lapping.
                        No chance, my Dad made sure I did all the valve lapping, said it was the best way to learn. Mind you, I always was cack-handed with a spanner and haven't worked on an engine for years. Dad was brilliant, he could do anything with cars.
                        John

                        "A hundredth of a second here, a hundredth of a second there � even if you put them end to end, they still only add up to one, two, perhaps three seconds, snatched from eternity." ~ Robert Doisneau

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                        • #13
                          Re: Second study in brown

                          Hermatite

                          Some of my favourite garage tools are those which are home made/adapted.

                          Tappets, shims, points are all familiar territory. As is a timing gun - when was the last time you saw someone break one of those out?!

                          Presumably imperial feelers?

                          And I like the irony of the hammer and screwdriver together. As if one is ever used without the other!
                          My Flickr

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                          • #14
                            Re: Second study in brown

                            Good to see an abused screwdriver and a Birmingham screwdriver (aka a hammer) in the same pic.

                            Martin

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                            • #15
                              Re: Second study in brown

                              Originally posted by al_kaholik View Post
                              Hermatite

                              And I like the irony of the hammer and screwdriver together. As if one is ever used without the other!
                              Me? Hammer. Screwdriver? With my reputation??

                              Oh I've changed brake shoes, plugs, points, oil filters (oil runs up your arm..).. I once changed the rear subframe on an Austin 1100. However the most ambition job I ever did was changing the clutch in a Porsche 911. Even now I can't believe I did that single handed.

                              Meanwhile I discover crawling under the Subaru to fit anti roll bar bushes turns out to be painful and surprisingly difficult. Were bolts always done up this tight, or am I getting weak in my old age?

                              Pete
                              Look, I'm an old man. I shouldn't be expected to put up with this.


                              Pete's photoblog Misleading the public since 2010.

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