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Lotus Europa Forums => Garage => Topic started by: Bryan Boyle on Friday,May 31, 2024, 07:13:53 AM

Title: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Bryan Boyle on Friday,May 31, 2024, 07:13:53 AM
Saw (somewhere) a posting from Michael Murray-John regarding his engineered boot lid strut system.  Looked interesting, so, contacted him (again, my mind is going soft sometimes...) and signed up.

Big box arrived with all the bits...lower strut brace, upper attach mounts, spacers, nuts, bolts, a spreader bar (more about that later) and 2 20lb gas struts.  And an extra clip for the strut ball joint (in case one on the strut goes walkabout...).

Couple comments:  you need to follow the directions; the orientation of the upper mounts' rear bolt drilling is specified as 17" as shown in the photo below, 3/16" below the top of the deck.  Once you drill the 17" point, the brace can be used to site the forward hole.

I mounted the struts with the gas cylinders at the bottom; he shows them as being mounted at the top to the deck.  Thinking it's a matter of taste; they work either way.

The lower braces are not physically attached to the seat belt cross-brace bar, but are a soft 'press' fit.  Persuasion with a deadblow hammer to set them in place then tap the front to move it side to side works.  When you drill the hole through the seatbelt rear brace through the body...the spacer that you use will set your rear side-to-side...just tap the front so it's parallel to the centerline of the car.

The spreader bar is about an inch short to really let you tighten down the nuts that hold it in place on the upper mounts, and is soft aluminum besides.  I suggested that Michael lengthen the bar a bit and provide aluminum nuts vs the stainless...or do the spreader out of a harder alloy.  Mine stripped quite easily; I just JBWelded the stripped nut on, tightened down...no once can see it anyway.

Anyway...all in all, very pleased with not having to carry a bracing stick to keep my deck open after a drive (I open the bootlid when I put her away after taking a spin), the struts are strong enough but not so overpowering that you have to sit on the lid to close it, and the quality of the metalwork and fasteners is top shelf (aluminum spreader bar notwithstanding...).

No financial interest...but was a lot less expensive than some of the alternatives coming from some of the usual suspects.  Apologies for quality of the first photo...I had painted the lower brackets black to blend in...and had to fiddle with the settings on the phone camera to make it stand out. 
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Grumblebuns on Friday,May 31, 2024, 07:59:53 AM
Thought about making up my own system, but have too many other projects. From your pictures, a very nice looking system. Do you have the contact info for the seller? 
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: BDA on Friday,May 31, 2024, 08:52:59 AM
Very nice setup! Putting the gas part of the strut at the bottom also reduces the weight the strut needs to act on (I was going to say on the margins but the engine cover is so light, it might be more significant than it sounds!) so that should aid their longevity.

I already installed struts on my car so I don't need another set but I would also like to know where you got them.
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Bryan Boyle on Saturday,June 01, 2024, 08:46:11 AM
Thought about making up my own system, but have too many other projects. From your pictures, a very nice looking system. Do you have the contact info for the seller? 

Will check back through my copious emails, Joji...know it's around somewhere...;)  between the 2 FB europa lists, groups.io, and here...sometimes knowing where you interacted is a bit frightening, LOL
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Bryan Boyle on Monday,June 03, 2024, 08:14:09 AM
[quote author=Bryan Boyle link=topic=6566.msg70838#msg70838 date=1717256771

Will check back through my copious emails, Joji...know it's around somewhere...;)  between the 2 FB europa lists, groups.io, and here...sometimes knowing where you interacted is a bit frightening, LOL
[/quote]

Sent you both PMs...didn't want to spam the list without the producer knowing...and suddenly gets innundated  if anyone wants the info, LMK and I'll PM you.
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: dakazman on Monday,June 03, 2024, 08:20:15 AM
  Will check back through my copious emails, Joji...know it's around somewhere...;)  between the 2 FB europa lists, groups.io, and here...sometimes knowing where you interacted is a bit frightening, LOL
   :FUNNY: :FUNNY: :FUNNY:
   You can wait a bit but Please include me also.
Dakazman
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: kram350kram on Tuesday,June 04, 2024, 05:45:09 AM
I might be wrong, but thought gas structs should be mounted with the body above the rod? Not sure why, maybe for seal lubrication? Thought I read this when I was doing research on structs.
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: GavinT on Tuesday,June 04, 2024, 04:47:13 PM

[...] Putting the gas part of the strut at the bottom also reduces the weight the strut needs to act on [...]


Yep, less unsprung mass.
Always thinking is our BDA. :D
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: BDA on Tuesday,June 04, 2024, 04:52:16 PM
  :BEER3:  :beerchug:
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: 314159td on Tuesday,June 04, 2024, 06:42:23 PM
I might be wrong, but thought gas structs should be mounted with the body above the rod? Not sure why, maybe for seal lubrication? Thought I read this when I was doing research on structs.

There's also a pretty rare failure case where water can sit atop the seal and corrode the rod in that area. Applies more to modern hatchbacks where the resting position is much more vertical.
Some struts do specify a preferred resting orientation, has to do with how the damping mechanism works. You might notice that suspension dampers can function differently when upside-down (usually had a bit of a "dead zone"), same idea.

Ask the manufacturer, and if they say it doesn't matter, it's not worth thinking about.
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Bryan Boyle on Wednesday,June 05, 2024, 04:45:14 PM
I might be wrong, but thought gas structs should be mounted with the body above the rod? Not sure why, maybe for seal lubrication? Thought I read this when I was doing research on structs.

There's also a pretty rare failure case where water can sit atop the seal and corrode the rod in that area. Applies more to modern hatchbacks where the resting position is much more vertical.
Some struts do specify a preferred resting orientation, has to do with how the damping mechanism works. You might notice that suspension dampers can function differently when upside-down (usually had a bit of a "dead zone"), same idea.

Ask the manufacturer, and if they say it doesn't matter, it's not worth thinking about.

simple enough to change if that is important...lol.
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: GPS on Thursday,June 13, 2024, 09:13:43 AM
Yes sir that sounds like a good system.
I would be interested in the buyers contact info.

Cheers

GPS
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Bryan Boyle on Thursday,June 13, 2024, 07:16:42 PM

[...] Putting the gas part of the strut at the bottom also reduces the weight the strut needs to act on [...]


Yep, less unsprung mass.
Always thinking is our BDA. :D

Flopped them around and put the cylinder on the bootlid side...no detectable change in performance or action.  Thinking, in the end...it's a matter of taste.  Maybe I'll put one the other way...mix an match...lol. 
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Dilkris on Friday,June 14, 2024, 12:50:11 AM
Saw (somewhere) a posting from Michael Murray-John regarding his engineered boot lid strut system.  Looked interesting, so, contacted him (again, my mind is going soft sometimes...) and signed up.


Hi Bryan - can you post more photo's of this arrangement please? I am interested to know how the deck lid is strong enough to accept the mounting of those brackets and what is the purpose of the adjoining bar from one side to the other.?
I am wanting to install such a system on my rebuild but envisage having to bond an aluminum frame of some kind onto the underside of the deck lid so as to accept and spread the load of the upper gas strut mountings - your install appears to negate this.     
   
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Bryan Boyle on Saturday,June 15, 2024, 10:54:38 AM
Saw (somewhere) a posting from Michael Murray-John regarding his engineered boot lid strut system.  Looked interesting, so, contacted him (again, my mind is going soft sometimes...) and signed up.


Hi Bryan - can you post more photo's of this arrangement please? I am interested to know how the deck lid is strong enough to accept the mounting of those brackets and what is the purpose of the adjoining bar from one side to the other.?
I am wanting to install such a system on my rebuild but envisage having to bond an aluminum frame of some kind onto the underside of the deck lid so as to accept and spread the load of the upper gas strut mountings - your install appears to negate this.     
   

Sure.  Take a look below. 

It's extremely simple (though the instructions need be read a couple times to get the gist).  Basically, 2 long flat head bolts drive through the bootlid side, capturing a stiffening metal plate on the inside of the side flange of the bootlid, 2 phenolic (plastic?) spacers to locate the mount clear and into the open space of the engine room along the edge, the upper mount, washers, and lock nuts.  There is not a lot of weight (ie there is some flex in the boot lid, which we all know) for the mechanism to work against...the cross rod is to keep the upper mounts at the proper (parallel to the edges) distance from each other, especially on the coolant catch can side. This distributes the load, I believe to the sides where it is picked up by the edge flanges which are stiffer than the cross-lid. 

Sharp eyes will note that I turned the gas cylinders around so the rod is at the bottom.  NO difference in how it works, btw.

The lower mounts (which I posted a couple weeks ago) are close fit onto the cross-tube for the seatbelt mounts, and mounted, at the rear, through the seat belt brace on the engine room sidewalls. 

HTH.  I'm pleased with both the quality as well as the operation.  Nice piece of kit, in my estimation.

Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Dilkris on Saturday,June 15, 2024, 11:46:52 AM
Thankyou for thumbnails and explanation Bryan but how do you open a png file format?
I've never seen or heard of one before.....  :confused:
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: BDA on Saturday,June 15, 2024, 01:02:15 PM
png stands for "Portable Network Graphics" so it's fairly common now but before .png, the .jpg or .jpeg format were more common. It sounds like your browser doesn't support it. You might want to see if you can update your browser or try another one. It should be easy enough to download an app to display those files if you search for something like "png viewer." The Windows 10 Photos program supports .png format for example.
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: EuropaTC on Sunday,June 16, 2024, 12:14:42 AM
PNG files open/expand in the 3 browsers I have here, Firefox, Chrome & Edge so if yours is up to date then you should be ok.
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Dilkris on Sunday,June 16, 2024, 12:19:50 PM
PNG files open/expand in the 3 browsers I have here, Firefox, Chrome & Edge so if yours is up to date then you should be ok.
Mine don't  :confused:
Can you copy/paste, save in jpg format and repost for me??  :-[   
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: BDA on Sunday,June 16, 2024, 12:36:45 PM
Here you go Dilkris
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: EuropaTC on Sunday,June 16, 2024, 09:49:55 PM
Mine don't  :confused:
Can you copy/paste, save in jpg format and repost for me??  :-[
BDA beat me to it. It sounds like something's odd going on if they don't re-size when you click on a .png file. I'm on W11 and the default app for .png is set to Photoshop but they still re-size in whatever browser I'm using.  What set-up (OS/browser) are you using ? Strict security such as turning off javascript can cause some sites to fall over ?
Title: Re: Rear Deck Struts
Post by: Dilkris on Monday,June 17, 2024, 12:15:01 AM
Here you go Dilkris

Thankyou so much BDA -  :beerchug: