Dialing in the seating position seems to be the piece that will take plenty of fine tuning.
-The Steering wheel is going to be replaced by a Nardi wheel with a slight dish and an added 1/2" spacer between the wheel and the hub. Im hoping that will bring the wheel close enough when everything else is suited properly.
-The Shifter will be addressed with the remote shifter I have. The test fit was both an uplifting and disheartening moment. The car loses a bit of its Alfa character, but having the shifter right where you want it... thats the best. Alfaholics has a solution, but its not a cheap one so that will have to be something to consider later in life.
-The pedals... Well, I hadn't gotten this deep into the position yet, I just couldnt enjoy the drive with an extreme bend of my knees so that was the first thing I wanted to deal with. However moving the seating position back reveled all the other nuances to deal with.
We can discuss an idea I have for the pedal that may be a quick & easy solution you can try out when you're bored haha.
Driver mirror works as a blind spot mirror and thats about it. Pass side is useless and the interior mirror has a broken piece rendering it useless as well... its an Italian car, whats behind you is not y our problem lol
The Super Nuova...
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Wow, I finally got caught up on this project. Also watched the last few videos. Fun! Shame on me for not seeing this earlier.
Welding the panel in wasn't bad at all. In my trade, I don't really deal with rust, but thin sheet metal is typical. Having the machine set correctly, or at least close, is most of the battle, and then a little technique to fill in the gaps (pun intended?). Call it cheating, but the machine we have at work has an auto setting for all thicknesses of metal, and it performed admirably on this thin stuff. I even had several spots where the metal would just evaporate, but I could play around with it and got it all filled in.
You'll see where it's at in person, and then point out anything else before I tackle the outer panel.
On a separate note, I have some notes about the driving position. As someone mentioned earlier, the pedals are a bit close and the wheel a bit far. You and I are different heights, so obviously it suits you better, but I'd love to find a way to adjust the gas pedal. And, there's a huge hump in the floor (for the little resonator/muffler underneath) that props up the heel of my foot, but then the hump slopes down, so the floor is really low (comparatively). I know it's not an option, but I really wanna cut the damn floor out, flatten it, and move the exhaust over! Lol. It would give me more leg room by letting my foot sit lower.
Another, more realistic option is to reconfigure the angle of the pedal, so it's at least tilted further forward, giving my foot more space. I suggest this because doing a heel-toe shift is damn near impossible, because the throttle sits so much "further back" when the brake is depressed. I think the E30 pedals are perfect, so that's where I'm coming from. I looked at the hinge, and perhaps the simplest solution is to re-angle the rod coming down, so it sets the tip of the pedal in a better spot, relative to the brake and floor.
The side and rearview mirrors are practically useless and it's loud and the hvac constantly blows cold air and the interior lights don't work and basically you don't want this car back, Simon, it's terrible, I'll just keep it
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Chilezen put out a feeler recently to see if anyone has a car that he could drive temporarily while he sorts out his 24v engine swap. Normally I’m not one to offer my cars, but in this case, Kevan is a welder by trade and well... I offered my car if he could help welding up the panel. I threw the tank back in, zip tied the license plate lights since the rear bumper wasn’t going back on yet and eventually she fired back up.


He took the car on Saturday and yesterday sent me this pic. Worth the trade, though I’m a little disappointed in myself that I couldn’t get it done. He is likely to take care of the outer panel also, but the rockers are going to be my problem

I’m happyLeave a comment:
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Just rolling next to them in the i3 was an experience... the BEST thing about an EV is my little box was silent and I got to enjoy all the noises in front of meLeave a comment:
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The value of the cars in that picture is higher than all of the houses within a square mile of my house.
Things ARE different in California.Leave a comment:
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a little taste of what I experienced a the Ferrari day today at the Petersen museum. 15 minutes away from my house.
SkiFree The cost to use Weber’s is a bit silly, especially when the Twin Spark motor runs injection so well. Give me a chance to build it all before you judge it.Leave a comment:
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Assuming both are using the same diameter piping, the difference in HP on a street car is going to come down to hair splitting.
Super excited you got this. I'm already daydreaming of doing some road trips together.
However, since you said the dirty word "injection" I'm a little hurt! What am I going to do with the two pair of Italian Webers I have? (one set of 40's and another 45's).Leave a comment:
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Pick out the header per where your cam makes power?
What do many of these cars make with those mods?
I envy the California car scene, maybe one day I’ll see if the price is worth the cost.
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So these are my two main options when it comes to Headers. Centerline here in the US which appear to be a 4-1 versus the British option with much longer primaries. Looks like the Centerline is the torque-centric option versus the “long-tube” / “higher bhp” option.
I’m curious what everyone’s thoughts and experiences are with this. I read a long thread on the AlfaBB from like 10 years ago that seems like everyone was dug into their own products and ideologies. I wonder if time has come to show which piece is suited for what goal and if I’m off from my observation

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Some more action going on ...


Valves and Valvetrain arrived and going in this week!



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