So, I lost my job. I went from the highest performance-based raise in the company 8 months ago to getting the ax last week because work has dried up, especially in my skill set. Sucks, but it opens up other options for me.
Like being able to work on Project Pipsqueak.
I met a local guy last year, Adam, just before the engine in my turbo Miata let go. He was getting ready to do a V8 swap in his 1991 and sold me the drivetrain. Since then he and I have talked a bit about his swap and I've done a little welding for him. Well, since I have a lot of free time these days, and he doesn't, Pipsqueak is coming to live with me for a little while.
Details so far:
1991 NA chassis, ~72k miles, FL car (hooray no rust!)
Modified LS1, ~440bhp, re-dressed with shorter engine accessories
Boss Frog front subframe and mounts
Boss frog chassis rails and transmission mount
Boss frog rear differential mount/rear sub-frame mods
Boss frog 4-1 headers
FM radiator
FM Vmaxx track suspension (shocks, springs, sway bars)
I'm not sure what the rear-end is...
I will be working on sorting out the fuel system, cooling system (including moutning the radiator), wiring harness, finishing the transmission mounting, cleaning up the engine bay, re-plumbing several brake lines, starting (and maybe finishing) the exhaust, and giving some general TLC to numerous little things as they arise.
The official to-do list to get it driving:
I started by pulling the dopey style bar, the PO had it installed and the CO doesn't want it. Style bars are useless, and probably dangerous, good call.
I then rolled around under the car for an hour or so inspecting everything that Adam had done so far. Pretty much all good work, especially for a guy who had only done oil changes up until this project (talk about going in head-first!). This is a big reason why I agreed to take this project on, I'm not patching up shoddy work, I'm continuing good, solid work.
The PO, however, was pretty bad in many ways. Virtually all of the carpeting is lined with this foil bubble wrap insulation crap. I assume the PO was too cheap to get dynamat, and opted for this instead. Makes sense given that Adam had already pulled pink fiberglass out of the trunk...
Since I need to install the radiator in a non-traditional manor, a side-effect of using an FM radiator with a non-FM sub-frame, I decided to pull the front bumper and fenders. This also paves the way for a fast Boss Frog Arm install later, a mod that I highly recommend.
Found a compost pile in each front fender, very typical of all NA Miatas. Very little rust underneath the fender, even with all the leaves and sand, I was quite impressed. You can see how Mazda cleverly designed the forward rain gutter to dump everything it caught right into the inside of the fender!
All stripped down and ready for some work!
I then switched focus to the transmission mount as I was quickly running out of time for the day. Initially Adam had some trouble getting this mount to work, and I can see why: it's really easy to install backwards! With that corrected, and a little massaging, it's now clamped in place and ready to be match-drilled.
The transmission mount needs four holes match-drilled in it, Boss Frog doesn't drill them because there is too much variance between cars (I assume). We had issues getting proper coverage of everything, but eventually got it all sorted out.
Well, I look forward to the challenge that this project will bring, and especially to helping Adam break it in on the track and autox course! Stay tuned ATG...
Like being able to work on Project Pipsqueak.
I met a local guy last year, Adam, just before the engine in my turbo Miata let go. He was getting ready to do a V8 swap in his 1991 and sold me the drivetrain. Since then he and I have talked a bit about his swap and I've done a little welding for him. Well, since I have a lot of free time these days, and he doesn't, Pipsqueak is coming to live with me for a little while.
Details so far:
1991 NA chassis, ~72k miles, FL car (hooray no rust!)
Modified LS1, ~440bhp, re-dressed with shorter engine accessories
Boss Frog front subframe and mounts
Boss frog chassis rails and transmission mount
Boss frog rear differential mount/rear sub-frame mods
Boss frog 4-1 headers
FM radiator
FM Vmaxx track suspension (shocks, springs, sway bars)
I'm not sure what the rear-end is...
I will be working on sorting out the fuel system, cooling system (including moutning the radiator), wiring harness, finishing the transmission mounting, cleaning up the engine bay, re-plumbing several brake lines, starting (and maybe finishing) the exhaust, and giving some general TLC to numerous little things as they arise.
The official to-do list to get it driving:
I started by pulling the dopey style bar, the PO had it installed and the CO doesn't want it. Style bars are useless, and probably dangerous, good call.
I then rolled around under the car for an hour or so inspecting everything that Adam had done so far. Pretty much all good work, especially for a guy who had only done oil changes up until this project (talk about going in head-first!). This is a big reason why I agreed to take this project on, I'm not patching up shoddy work, I'm continuing good, solid work.
The PO, however, was pretty bad in many ways. Virtually all of the carpeting is lined with this foil bubble wrap insulation crap. I assume the PO was too cheap to get dynamat, and opted for this instead. Makes sense given that Adam had already pulled pink fiberglass out of the trunk...
Since I need to install the radiator in a non-traditional manor, a side-effect of using an FM radiator with a non-FM sub-frame, I decided to pull the front bumper and fenders. This also paves the way for a fast Boss Frog Arm install later, a mod that I highly recommend.
Found a compost pile in each front fender, very typical of all NA Miatas. Very little rust underneath the fender, even with all the leaves and sand, I was quite impressed. You can see how Mazda cleverly designed the forward rain gutter to dump everything it caught right into the inside of the fender!
All stripped down and ready for some work!
I then switched focus to the transmission mount as I was quickly running out of time for the day. Initially Adam had some trouble getting this mount to work, and I can see why: it's really easy to install backwards! With that corrected, and a little massaging, it's now clamped in place and ready to be match-drilled.
The transmission mount needs four holes match-drilled in it, Boss Frog doesn't drill them because there is too much variance between cars (I assume). We had issues getting proper coverage of everything, but eventually got it all sorted out.
Well, I look forward to the challenge that this project will bring, and especially to helping Adam break it in on the track and autox course! Stay tuned ATG...