rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 24, 2011 17:31:49 GMT
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While the bonnet was straight and free of dents and scratches, there was some gaffer's tape on each side, which I think was to stop it being scraped by ropes or tie-downs. It had gone hard being out in the open weather, so after a few marginally successful attempts at peeling the dry tape off by hand, we decided it needed some attacking with various cleaning and grime removal products. My arms are obviously not the strongest for tough cleaning, so my awesome girlfriend Sally started scrubbing away with some sponges, a toothbrush and a mix of Windex, Jif and lots of water. Judging by her comments, she was not particularly excited to be spending a sunny afternoon scrubbing a car bonnet in the backyard. Under my careful and expert supervision, she managed to get all the tape and gum completely off the bonnet, leaving it much tidier looking than before.
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 24, 2011 17:38:40 GMT
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We stood it up to dry in the sun for a little while, and then I supervised the transportation of the bonnet from the backyard to the garage. At some point a courier had dropped off my Ensure liquid feed supplies at the front door. With a ratchet at the ready, I watched as Sally and Todd carefully lowered the bonnet down onto the car. For some reason it looked like it wasn't fitting properly, which didn't make sense considering the bonnet was from another Cefiro, and I didn't see how they could be any different. But it was quite a way off actually being in the right spot. I spent a minute or two being confused, until looking more closely at the corners of the bonnet. I then realised that since the white bonnet came with hinges, it would probably work better if I removed the black bonnet's hinges from the car first. With that low-IQ moment out of the way, a couple of minutes with the ratchet had the white bonnet secured to the car. Despite being a cooler shade of white compared to the slightly creamy car, it was immediately a big improvement to the look of the Cefiro. After seeing it for so long with a black bonnet, it was great to have the car pretty much all the same colour. Not a perfect match, which was more apparent from some angles than others, but as far as blatantly sticking out in traffic went, the obviousness was dialed way down. I did manage to put a lot of greasy fingerprints on the previously clean bonnet though. From the right-hand side, the paint appeared to be more similar, although that was partially due to the different light I think. Feeling like I'd removed the target from my car with the white bonnet, and not having too bad a day health-wise, I decided it was a nice afternoon to go for our first hills run in a very, very long time. Coming up in Post #17; a hills run to Hahndorf.
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 26, 2011 2:03:53 GMT
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Following the bonnet swap and after cleaning up greasy hands and changing clothes, Sally and I headed out in the Cefiro, planning on going up to the German Arms at Hahndorf. I felt more relaxed driving around with the car not standing out so much due to panda-spec panels. Getting up to Glen Osmond Road near the freeway, I pulled into a BP service station to fill the tank up with premium, which certainly hadn't gotten any cheaper since I was last driving regularly. After topping up the fuel tank, we headed up the freeway towards Hahndorf. The Heysen Tunnels are always a good spot to lower the windows, slow down and then give the car a bit of a boot, with the exhaust and turbo sounds loudly echoing off the tunnel walls. A little bit further on we passed a paddy wagon/ute full of pigs which I thought was a bit unusual. That said, I don't live anywhere in the country where putting pigs in a ute is necessary, so it probably isn't odd at all. Rolling through Hahndorf, the sun was getting pretty low in the sky, so I took a bit of a detour on a random winding road to get some shots of the car in decent light. Coming up to a t-junction, the street sign pointed to 'Pain Road', which was mildly amusing I guess. A little further up, Pain Road turned into gravel, so I stopped to take some photos of the Ceffy in the shade under some trees, with the golden sunlight in the background. It was so good to have such a nice backdrop for photos, as opposed to my garage or a Foodland car park.
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 26, 2011 12:53:50 GMT
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 26, 2011 12:56:30 GMT
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Speedle
Posted a lot
Need a Country Rock band in the Hampshire Area? https://www.facebook.com/DirtRoadDiaryUK
Posts: 2,221
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Sept 26, 2011 15:58:04 GMT
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Love this car, looks great dude! I hope you paid for dinner after making the misses scrub that bonnet
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 28, 2011 1:58:51 GMT
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Thanks Speedle. I sure did pay for dinner to thank her for all the manual labour; burger, drinks and all, made cheaper by the fact that I can't eat. Thanks Luciano, it was about to get a bit cleaner as you'll see in the next few posts. I was still feeling quite good the day after the awesome Hahndorf hills run with Sally, so we headed up to Mullers Road Crash Repairs to get a quote from owner Cameron for cleaning up and respraying some panels on the Cefiro. These first few photos are from a GoPro HD Hero camera, which I had mounted on the windscreen, set to take photos every two seconds. You can see more information about the camera on their website here: gopro.com/You can make cool time lapse video clips with it taking photos so often, but the drive wasn't particularly interesting compared to hills runs, so these are just a couple with trucks in them on the way up. Once we arrived at the workshop, I grabbed the D300 for some non-warped photos like you get from the GoPro, which as you can see in the above pictures, has a very wide field of view. Cameron came out to have a look around the Cefiro, checking out the various marks and paintwork, and gave me a good price to have it all cleaned up the following Monday.
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 28, 2011 2:04:16 GMT
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 28, 2011 8:14:31 GMT
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stealthstylz
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 14,960
Club RR Member Number: 174
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1988 Nissan A31 Cefirostealthstylz
@stealthstylz
Club Retro Rides Member 174
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Sept 28, 2011 8:18:30 GMT
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Nice to see a modified classic car in Oz that hasn't got 27billiontyinchshinychrome wheels. The Cefiro looks great too.
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Sept 30, 2011 5:20:17 GMT
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Last Edit: Sept 30, 2011 5:22:19 GMT by rohan
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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With the car freshly sprayed and polished, on the 12th of August, I headed back up to Cameron's workshop to pick up the Ceffy. As I walked up the driveway, I saw it was parked outside the spray booth, looking very tidy. Just respraying and repairing those few front panels, as well as painting over the black strips on the bumpers, made a huge difference aesthetically to the car's appearance. With the gouges and mismatched panels gone, it finally just looked really nice, simple and clean, which is the look I had been wanting all along. I was curious as to how a blue pearl was blended with the white paint, so Cameron took me into his paint storage shed and showed how the paint and pearl combination was mixed. I was very happy with how clean the Cefiro looked after the fresh paint job. So if you need some quality paint or panel work done, give Cameron a call at Mullers Road Crash Repairs, on 8261 2328. After chatting for a little while about cars, I handed over some cash for the work, and then stopped in at a BP to fill up the tank. I snapped a few more photos as well. Premium wasn't cheap that day at $1.64 a litre, but after ten months of having the same tank of fuel while the Ceffy was sitting idle in the garage, I figured it didn't matter that much. With the fuel topped up, I thought that since the weather wasn't too bad, it would be a good time for an afternoon hills run to get some nice updated photos of it, while still looking clean and polished. Coming up in Post #21; photos from the hills run.
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Although I was really not feeling too good, I still thought it would be worth going for a hills run to get some photos, while the Ceffy was freshly sprayed, clean and polished. After heading up North-East Road from Cameron's workshop, I made it into the hills, and put my foot down as the road curved steeply upwards ahead. After enjoying some nice corners for a little while, I pulled up on a side road near Houghton to snap a few photos of the Cefiro. You'll see from the photos that the 'CEFIRO' tail-light centre garnish has been replaced with the more subtle 'Nissan' one. In combination with the de-badging on the boot, it was now fairly anonymous, unless you know what a Cefiro is. I'd talked to both the RAA and an auto electrician previously, and had to explain to both what kind of car it was and how to spell it, which I thought was kind of funny. Photos taken with a Nikon D90 + Nikkor 50mm f/1.4G lens, and Nikon D300 + Nikkor 85mm f/1.4D lens. After taking these pics, I headed off again down the road, enjoying the corners and sound of the exhaust and turbo. My stomach wasn't very happy, but at least a hills run was a good distraction from it. A few kilometres further along I rolled into the small town of Inglewood, a again turned down a picturesque side road. Burbling down the steep grade, there was a small bridge going over a creek. It looked like a nice spot for some more photos, so I pulled up in the middle of it, grabbed my D90 and 50mm lens, and wandered around to get some different angles. This is the view from the side of the bridge, which was quite idyllic with the gently flowing stream surrounded by trees and lush greenery. The blue Ford F-Series pickup in the background looked pretty cool, so I got back in the car and drove up to the top of the slope to get a better picture of it, followed by a couple of the front of my car.
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Love it, makes me want to move over there Nice prgoress with the car, looks sweet.
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Oct 19, 2011 13:55:17 GMT
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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Oct 19, 2011 14:02:48 GMT
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Lex
South East
日本車 <3
Posts: 2,404
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Oct 19, 2011 14:27:20 GMT
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This is great I love these cars. Nice to see someone taking so much pride in their car and documenting it's changes.
One thing I must express though, is after all your mentions of defect stickers from the police, Australia just lost some of its awesome points it once had with me! Stickering the Skyline because it had stiff suspension and a fast engine? That's just bonkers!
I'd really like to own one of these one day, but you just don't get them over here!
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Resto-UKal
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brawr
Part of things
Posts: 650
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Oct 19, 2011 22:00:39 GMT
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Looks so much cleaner, and the wheels are perfect for this. Nice work! Also, re: the truck; paging KevFromWales...
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Last Edit: Oct 19, 2011 22:01:23 GMT by brawr
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rohan
Part of things
Posts: 282
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nice pics, keep em coming.
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@ CRX_IN_SCOTLAND
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