Hi everyone, sorry to be off line for a while but there has been a lot going on. I sold my 64 Elan S1 to a really nice Lotus Enthusiast who deserved the multi year restoration and award winning car I built. Then I bought a 2005 Lotus Elise for "future use". I think I have a buyer for my 65 Elan S2 and i'm finishing up some details on my Europa before I post some national ads to sell it.
So, the subject at hand...….the Europa TC. I have a short list of things to complete on it that I am working through. One of them was to attach a clip at the rear transmission bracket to hold the speedo cable away from the shift tube when I'm in third gear. Bruce made the suggestion and I executed it (Thanks Bruce!). Seems to work very well.
Today I went to Bill Thomas' Garage Club to have the Europa weighed as inquiring minds wanted to know (inclusive of me). Bill does a fair amount of race prep on Lotus cars so I knew he would have a sophisticated scale system. He is a very knowledgeable guy on all things related to sports cars so you can always learn something. While Bill was preparing to lower my Europa on the scales he noticed the right rear wheel had a movement to it. He brought to my attention that something was amiss and should be looked at. Odd I thought, I just had the car on the lift last weekend and had gone over everything (typical of my first 1000+ mile detailed review of underneath the car with spanners). Never the less, he went about setting the car down on the scales and I got a couple of photos of the read outs regarding total weight, corner weight and weight distribution. The Europa had a half tank of gas and all other fluids topped up, the spare tire with aluminum wheel mounted in the front, a fire extinguisher, but no luggage tray in the rear.
Over all, the Europa weighed more than I expected by almost 100 lbs at 1512 lbs. But the balance of the car was where I expected it to be. All good and no complaints from me.
Then we pulled the right rear wheel off to see what was up. The hub was loose, which really surprised me. It was ok to drive home but I wondered how that happened. Once I was home I put the car on the lift, removed the wheel and bent back the metal washer holding the axle nut in place. I was able to take the hub off with a few taps of a hammer. That should not have happened. I went back to my photos to confirm I put Loctite on the axle splines (yup) and that I had torqued the nut to 150lbs (yup). Odd.... I cleaned the inside of the hub and the axle splines with brake clean and a wire brush, dry fit the hub on the axle shaft and looked at all the clearances. Went back and read the manual and looked at the part manual. Everything seemed in order. I reapplied the Loctite on the splines (twice as much this time) and torqued the bolt to 150lbs, securing it with the bent washer and then bolting on the wheel. The cure setup is 1 hour and 7 hours for full cure. So I will let the car sit over night before I do a full road test.
Well, its really a race car for the street. Need to pay more attention.
Man I love driving this car!