Once again proving an MX5 is a practical car:
Yes kids, mania parts!
Which parts? Well all of this:
But most importantly; these!
The old ones, for comparison:
Yes, that's electrical tape on the left one...
After getting the latches in, it went from a constant annoying rubbing/squeak to a quieter, less frequent, but no less irritating creak-thud. I discovered that if I pushed on the chrome domes at the back of the HT, the HT would push down by a mm or so, making a thud when it contacted the car body.
I got the feeler gauges out and investigated the gap, discovering that it was more than 0.5mm but less than 1mm. (Clearly I didn't put a huge amount of effort into the measuring) and toddled myself off to Clark Rubber to see about sheets of ABS so I could make shims.
It turns out Clark Rubber don't have ABS, but they do have rolls of clear plastic at various thicknesses - I scored myself a whopping two inches of 0.5mm clear plastic (it's about 160cm wide) for the grand price of nothing.
Some quick eyeballing and some cuts later, and I had a pair of these: (nb: not in final form)
The passenger side fit snugly and stopped the HT moving, but the driver's side needed a second shim. I'll see if I can move the shims to below the HT thingies I just replaced, then they're attached to the HT. I was going to glue them originally, but I'm not sure it'll go to plan.
Now I'm down to soft-top rattles and mild creaking when I'm on a really victorian roads. Win. Good roads are excellent, and OK roads are pretty good! This is made all the more enjoyable by the fact that I took the speakers out of the car on friday for science. More on this another day though.
Also in my care package from mania was a hose kit! YAY! First I excitedly attached every hose clamp to every hose, tightened just enough to not fall off the hose. This actually turned out to be a bad idea. Don't do it, even if you are excited about new hoses and clamps. Just put them all in a pile, ordered by size if you must, and work from that. It's way easier than having to undo every single clap to get the hoses on....
Random progress photo. I started at the heater hoses and worked around to the front. Do it the other way so you're using fresh patience when doing all the little hoses at the front, the heater hoses are easy.
I've managed to get it all in except for the lower/front radiator hose which I'll do from underneath, and one hose clamp which the car seems to have eaten, it was on the hose, and then, it wasn't. I looked on the ground, but it wasn't there, and I've since washed my engine bay and still haven't found it.
OH YEAH! Washing engine bays! That's an adventure. The general consensus is don't do it, because boogeymen will poop in your kitchen sink while you sleep. This is not entirely untrue. While putting the hose kit in, I found some places where there was some oily gunk starting to build up, so I made mental notes of the locations, hit them all with CT18 and then the garden hose the next morning while everything was still cold.
I'd just like to point out that the attachment on the hose has been a nemesis of mine for quite some time now. It has a plastic self-locking mechanism that locks itself on and then allows a click-release so you don't have to hold the trigger. Except it sticks on randomly. Usually you just donk it on something and the self-lock disengages, and the water stops running. Not today. After a couple of polite donks it still wasn't disengaging, so a more spirited donk was called for. Slightly too spirited it seems, I broke it.
Oh well, they opened a new bunnings around the corner the other month, and I hadn't been yet, so off we went and got a new nozzle and a couple of customary snags in bread. Lil red ran fine, no indication of chaos from washing the engine bay, so happy days. I got back home and fluffed around with the new hose making sure all the spray patterns worked (they do) collected the camera, jumped in the car and ... it sounded like a combi van.
Panic sets in.
I have killed my baby. My baby is dead, and it's all my fault because I'm a terrible mother.
Luckily, years of monkeying away in IT has taught me to "panic away from the problem". Droo was on the internets and conveniently (for me) has done the same thing in the past and gave me things to try. The issue appears to have been "water in the spark plug wells" because blasting it out with the air compressor sorted it out. Word of warning, you can (or; I do) get oil in these wells, so put a rag over the top of the hole when you're blasting it out, even with the rag in place I managed to spray oily goop everywhere on one occasion. It turns to an excellent mist and goes a long way, and I'd just cleaned everything.....
So, back to the hose kit;
It's holding water quite nicely, my small cold water leak is gone which is excellent because it was dripping on the fan belt leading to random squeals. I did notice the rubber grommits around the heater pipes going into the firewall seem to be all sorts of stuffed. Also, are they supposed to move? (about 5mm)
There are other things that were delivered, but they will remain a secret until they're installed, tested and documented