First Drive - Home
On 18th March 2017 I took an early train up to
Chesterfield to pick up the Stag and drive it back home. It had a full MOT with
no advisories, so I know it was road worthy, however when I arrived it wouldn’t
start. It turned over but no trace of firing up. Swapped the coil. Checked
there was fuel. Inspected everything that was visible for things that may have
broken or fallen off - especially wires – nothing. Then after about an hour it
fired up as if the key had just been turned for the first time. Relived but slightly
anxious, I concluded the purchase paperwork, jumped in and pointed the car south.
Arrived home safely without further incident and introduced
the Stag to it’s new home.My empty garage.
The solution – empty some of the contents of the garage into
a) the tip and b) the sheds at the top of the garden. This is when I started to
realise that anything to do with this car will not be straightforward. I’ve
been putting off any repair work on the two old sheds I inherited when I bought
the house over 12 years ago. If I was to clear enough stuff out of the garage
to make it usable, then the sheds needed a refurb.
I was very wary whilst driving it the 60 plus miles back
home. Firstly because I didn’t know the car or its history, secondly because it
was 44 years old and not built to fantastic quality standards when it was new, and
thirdly (most importantly) the car had not been driven that far in almost 30 years!!
Old cars make noises. Things cluck and creak. Having owned
old cars in the past I knew this and ignored anything I thought was
superficial, however I did notice 3 things that were beyond normal background
chatter:
- – an intermittent cut-out of the electrics and engine: needles dropped back to zero, engine stopped firing but only momentarily, then everything burst into life again as if nothing happened. Just like when I first tried to start the car earlier that morning This occurred a few times, but each time less severely – it’s not happen since. Suspect a dirty contact on the inhibitor switch.
- – the alternator was charging quite nicely (15v ish) for a few miles as I expected it too since the car has stood for so long. Then there was a judder and the needle on the Voltage gauge dropped back to 12v and stayed there. I remember thinking this was odd, as the battery charging will be gradual and not on-off since we are not talking about complex electronics managing the charging process. See Inspection post item 22.
- – on the motorway, I tested the kick-down to overtake. It worked fine the first few times, but then there was a loss of power as the gearbox changed up. Not knowing the car well enough, and the power reduction not being that sever, I thought it was simply a characteristic of low revs and carried on a little more gingerly, wondering whether the stress I was putting on key components for the first time in 3 decades would lead to any catastrophic failures resulting in a call to the AA. See Inspection post item 20.
In the excitement of finding and buying this car in what had
been quite a short space of time, I had assumed that it would fit into a modern
garage. I assumed correctly, but only just.
I could only just close the garage door
due to the accumulate detritus from my last project. The Stag has a backseat
and boot, where the Seven had neither. Whilst it fitted, there was nowhere to
work. After my initial interactions with the Stag I doubted this arrangement
would be a workable one - there is a lot of work to be done!!
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On closer inspection, the
back walls and rear floor of both sheds were rotten beyond simple repair. So,
Easter weekend was spent, not working on the Stag, but demolishing two old sheds
and replacing them with one new bigger one. Since then, the “stuff” has been slowly
moved from garage to the new shed, and numerous trips to the local trip have
been made.
The Stag now sits in the center of the garage with walking
space all around it. Time to start the new project in earnest.
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