Friday 30 January 2009

What?

So, Haynes dont have a specific manual dedicated to the Golf that can help me but I found and contacted another auto repair manual pubisher asking if they did. I cant believe the response I got from them. Actually, in all honesty, I cant understand it:
Hello,
We used to do similar manuals but that has changed over 10 years ago.
If you look at the 2nd page of this news letter this are the manuals we do which will have info
about your vehicle as well but not only.
Make cover is from a-z so from audis to volvos and as you can see they cover particular subject
for egz. Technical Data.
Same with our cd's they cover a group of subject on all european and uk cars
for egz. CD Basic covers technical data for petrol and diesel, timing belts, chains and gears which is
£99+Vat per year.


Looks like I'll be better off without theirs anyway!

Haynes are still being very helpful and seem to think they will have a manual that will cover the engine at least.

Thursday 29 January 2009

What a farce

Well, we left work early so that I could get a look at the wheels. I got away from the house late, and in a hurry, got to the barn and realised I had left the jack behind. I had also forgotten the car keys and the socket set to loosen the wheel nuts.

Anyway, after 3 return trips to the house I got everything with me and set about the rear wheel first. I had to use two bottle jacks to lift the car - one to lift it onto the 2nd which had the reach to lift the wheels off the ground but was too tall to get under the car.

This is what I was dealing with:



After hitting the brake drum for long enough (until my ears were ringing) I put the wheel back on and we got a little movement, twisting clockwise and then anti-clockwise eventually got it spinning freely again. The front wheels were a case of putting a pair of grips from the brake shoes to the callipers and easing the pads off the disc.

Next moves - clear the barn of hay and straw so the car can be towed out.

Thats for next week.

Could I have it in writing please?

Apart from not being able to get a donor steel wheel for the car I am now not able to locate a DIY manual for its maintenance either.

I contacted Haynes with the vehicle details and as it is a 1986 Golf Convertible it doesnt fall into their categories for any manual. This is because Volkswagen didnt make a convertible with a mkII body shell - they used mkI bodies and nailed those onto the mkII everything-else-underneath.

Tonight I am going to attempt to remove the brakes (2xfront, 1xback) with nothing more than guesswork and the memory of changing discs and pads on my T reg Fiesta (thats 1978 T as in ERF420T - I wonder where that car is now!?).

Hopefully pics and update later/tomorrow.

Tuesday 27 January 2009

no wheels (that work) on my (volks)wagon

Had a suggestion from a neighbour that we could weld a length (2m ish) of tube to a steel wheel rim, bolt that on and use it to free the wheels. Great idea. In practice however, it seems that steel rims to fit a 1986 Golf are hard to obtain. I would willingly swap my collection of rocking horse dung and hen's teeth for them ...

May be dragging the poor car from its abode with a tractor. Eek

Sunday 25 January 2009

Day one (ish)

Yesterday I spent the whole day clearing out the garage. It had been the default place to dump anything that didnt have a proper home for pretty much the last 18 months. It took all day and I had to be brutal about throwing stuff out. Why? Because today it was going to have a car put in it. As it happens it didnt but that gives me the chance to give you some of the back story and the reason for this blog.

I bought the car back in (ages ago, I cant remember when but probably 2003 or 2004). Its a Volkswagen Golf GTi Cabriolet - anyone from the US will know it as a VW Rabbit. We ran it for a year but it was getting vandalised and we decided to take it of the road. Luckily some friends of ours had a barn we could use to store it. well the time came to use the barn for barn like activities and we had to get the car moved. This coincided with us move house too so the car took up residence in another barn, just behind our horses stables. The car was not drivable at this point due to the battery going flat and the immobiliser , um , ... immobilising it. The brakes on one wheel had become seized too but that was sorted with a few swift swipes of a mallet.

this morning I went to the barn with the aim of towing it out with the pickup and then towing it into my newly empty (ish) garage. I got nowhere. 3 brakes are now seized so I am a bit stuck. I am going to look for advice from some local mechanics, the Haynes manual people and the Golf owners club. The barn isnt really big enough to renew the brakes where it is and I dont have all the tools to hand either.

I will try to post photos and keep things up to date here as I work on renovating the car and getting it back to the way it should be.