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Thread: How to mod a late booster for MK1.

  1. #21
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    Cylinder attached.



    Vacuum line attached (after testing). and brake lines attached. Bending the lines is a bit fiddly but so long as you take your time and take it easy you'll avoid kinking the lines.

    I'm going to install a brake switch directly off the pedal rather than use the hydraulic switches. You could plumb in T pieces and run the switches of them if you wanted to use the hydraulic switches.




    Nissan Pulsar reservoir fitted up.




    I was a bit worried the expansion tank wouldn't fit but it clears the booster by just enough.

    Last edited by Peter Jones; 09-01-2008 at 09:29 PM.

  2. #22
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    Because the new booster isn't as deep as the old one and the cylinder is shorter there's actually more room in the engine bay which is a pleasant surprise. Maybe enough room for my next air horn project.


  3. #23
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    nice work mate... very impressive

    I love using later model golf/seat stuff on mk1s. Keeps stuff "original"-looking but much more usable and reliable. Seat brakes especially, as the mk1s stoppers were never very good!!

    this is the sort of writeup that makes vwwatercooled so useful! mods, please put this in the friggin awesome section so it can be found easily and never disappers.

    keep up the good work

    mike

    ps ... love the horns.. do it.. you know you want to
    TDI mk1 on the road!!


  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jarred View Post
    wow pete, what a write up! Very informative and well presented., and you have a lathe! comes in handy aye?

    the mk 1 community thanks you. Or at least I do.
    oh and p.s. what do you have covering the top of your strut towers?
    Those are strut top covers! Every Golf left the factory with them but few survived. I was lucky and found a pair in a wreckers on a GLD. I'd never seen a pair before then.

    They stop dirt getting into the bearing on top of the strut.

    I reckon you could find caps off another car with struts that would do the same job. Take a wander through a self service wrecker and see what you can find.

    The lathe is very handy, I'm still learning how to use it. I can only do very basic stuff. It's very small, you'll never get a brake disc or a clutch on there. Great for nuts and bolts and just making things fit. Good for making up pins, stepbolts, bushes etc. I wish I could get the hang of the cut-off tool though. I usually resort to cutting the piece long with a hacksaw and trimming the end in the lathe.

    Pete

  5. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter Jones View Post
    Those are strut top covers! Every Golf left the factory with them but few survived. I was lucky and found a pair in a wreckers on a GLD. I'd never seen a pair before then.
    ..
    ah... I see. MIght fab some up out of something, if they are as rare as they are. What are they made, looks like plastic from here??

    Mods. how bout a sticky on this thread perhaps?


    i like volkswagens
    My blog: http://garagefiftythree.blogspot.com.au/

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jarred View Post
    ah... I see. MIght fab some up out of something, if they are as rare as they are. What are they made, looks like plastic from here??

    Mods. how bout a sticky on this thread perhaps?
    Yep,plastic. I'll pop up a close up later on when it isn't 100 degrees out in my driveway.

    Pete

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter Jones View Post
    There's a limit of 4 pics per post - so bear with me here.



    by the way pete i spoke with the other moderators and the images per post has been changed to 10 as it was something that always peeved me too

    Quote Originally Posted by Preen59 View Post
    I would have gotten wood from the picture message you sent me.. But I was sniffing Nitro, so i already had it. Hahaha.

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by dubstarmk2 View Post
    by the way pete i spoke with the other moderators and the images per post has been changed to 10 as it was something that always peeved me too
    Cool!

    FYI I resize everything to 800x600 so they'll fit on anybody's screen. Then I crop them if there's irrelevant stuff on the edges to save everyone's bandwidth (hence the oddly shaped images sometimes). So the biggest image I'll use is 800x600 - the originals are 2304 x 1728 if anybody wants more detail.

    I host everything on Photobucket so I guess it'll be available for a long time, the links should never expire hopefully.

    Pete

  9. #29
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    Great Write up Pete!
    I used to work at a joint that had 2 lathes, But I never thought about doin the stuff you do!
    Keep it goin!
    77'Golf

  10. #30
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    I read in Australian model engineering magazine that after 40 years practice with cut off tools become easy to use.
    They advised that until you have 40 years experience use a hacksaw.
    I know a guy who built a full size triple expansion steam engine and he uses a hacksaw.
    The best way i have found is to take off as much as you dare with the part off tool and then hacksaw through the rest with the lathe turning as this makes it much quicker.
    The worse thing is persisting with the part off tool and then just when you think you are going to do it this time it catches and it bends at 90 degrees right were you are trying to part off and the job goes bang bang bang into the bed of the lathe . Followed by a clunk as you chuck it in the bin

    Nick

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