Tinkering on a doughy brain day…
Made a replacement for the mangled door stay.

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Also squirted some aerosol paint over the rust repair… paint came out terribly, presumably because it is ancient.
And then I accidentally stuck my finger into the wet paint.
Twice.

More successful was fitting the the rear view mirror from the old yellow race car.

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Oh, and the aluminium disc I made for the back of a Magna is the right size for the front of a 240. Image description

I broke my own rule and spent some money on cosmetics… I bought a non-fog light grille from Berry’s, mostly because I wanted to look after the original.

6 days later

Been a busy week… day trip to Melbourne last Monday, collecting a GT for a friend, along with a bunch of bits from Berry Motor Group - you’ve heard it all before, but they are fantastic to deal with and have a great range of stuff.
Then getting my last wisdom tooth out, work, catching up with Phil H and having him give my garage a lot of Volvo cholesterol 😁, Blink/Rise Against concert, blah blah.

Which is all a long winded way of saying that I didn’t do much on the 244 until today…

Here’s some photos of my garage this morning… needed some time to clean it up so I could get stiff done!
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Cut the rear guard lips, and then folded them back.
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Also dug out some rear calipers and fitted them. They’re not 240, but I don’t know what they’re from…
Set the rear springs about as high as the adjusters allow - they might be right, or they are too low. If I need to go higher, I will have to make up some spacers to go between the spring seats and the body/trailing arm.

Took the towbar off and removed the fuel tank (because it is very rusty inside, as I had assumed).
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…which allowed me to take a photo showing the rust holes in the boot. Image description

The plan is to fit the nicely made aluminium tank that came out of the old race car. It’s about 40 litres, which is fine for this car.
The idea is that it will sit roughly where the red box is in this photo.
I will have to cut the boot floor, but am still working out where, and how I will mount the tank. Image description

Did all of the cutting and welding on the coilover conversion on second front strut.

First photo shows the cut down 240 leg, the BC lower leg that slides nicely over it, and the remnants of the 7/9 leg that I cut off when I cut the BC leg off the 7/9 strut.
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I also spent some time swapping tyres on rims. As well as fitting some tyres to the 17” wheels I’ve bought for the Falcon (in anticipation of fitting the upgraded brakes to the Falcon), I took the ancient, badly perished tyres from the 244 wheels and fitted some old Federal RSRR semi slicks I had hanging around.

I have sat the back of the car back on the ground but forgot to take a photo 🙄. It looks like it’s sitting around the right height, but I can’t really judge until I put the front back down.

Forget if I mentioned this previously, but I also managed to get the dash and headliner out last week.
The front end should be able to go back together tomorrow after work, and then I will work out the seat mounting.

Still blathering about turbo choice, but I have a crusty 90+ exhaust manifold and a LH2.x intake manifold now (thanks Phil), so I can start to get my head around the intercooler piping and EFI wiring.

Need to put some brain power into the ignition pick up for the shitty old Microtech.
It’s meant to use a two-lobed home/TDC reference and a 24-tooth speed signal.
On the old 244 rally car, I hacked up an FC RX7 CAS, but what used to be a $50 part is now worth $350++, so I am going to do something different on this car.

Currently thinking that I will see if I can make the standard Volvo reluctor to talk to the Dribbletech, and then fit a single lobe pickup onto the crank pulley.

Other things…
the centre bearing in the tailshaft appears to be buggered, and it’s rubber mount definitely is. Phil has supplied a better replacement that I will fill with Sikaflex.
Phil also supplied a power steering rack and pump/hoses, but I don’t have the matching lower part of the steering column. I can probably grab one from one of Petey’s wrecks, or I can keep looking for a replacement manual rack.
I know the PS will make it nicer to drive, but I also am liking the idea of not having anything in the engine bay.

Good to see it will live. I originally bought it from a man in Blayney a few years back and only used the callipers and Slave cylinder for a car I had then on sold it to David. It was in a very bad way. Was sitting under pine tress for years. Attempted to buy it back of David a few times with a when his ready he will let me know but never did. It's gone to a good home by the looks of it first 244 I owned. I never had it running other than on aerostart as I wasn't to familiar with 240s back then.

7 days later

Haven’t had much time to work on it in the past week, thanks to real life.

VRS gasket kit turned up, so I’m thinking I should pull the head off and have a look before I go any further.
Kind of contradicts my theory of spending no money, but also is insurance against spending time and money on an engine that’s crap.
Could also be an opportunity to do some minor head porting/port matching.

Anyhow, it’s back on four wheels. Image description
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Despite what I said earlier, the back is too high if anything.

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The front tyres rub on the struts, so the spacers I had planned are now essential.

Next job will be to plumb in the new brake lines … after I make a decision about what I am doing with the brake master cylinder/pedal box.

13 days later

I have been doing some work on this, but also been very lazy at updating the thread…

25mm spacers for the front. Would be too much without the negative camber, but close to perfect with the neg.

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Wheel hangs out with the camber set to neutral, but tucked in when set to something useful.
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Bought the wrong bearing for the tailshaft centre bearing.
Several EBay listings said they are a 6007, and I happened to stumble over one in the local machinery supply shop…
But no.

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Began converting to power steering. Scored a PS rack from Phil’s stash, but no matching intermediate shaft.

Petey gave me one from Bluemobile, but I had two lower universal joints and no upper ones, so it took a but of juggling to make it all fit.

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Have been massively over-complicating the location of the PS pump and alternator.

I want to avoid having anything in the space where the alternator is on an early OHC Redblock. This is partly to make everything easier to access, partly to try to reduce the weight on the RHF corner, but mostly to keep the relatively fragile alternator and PS pump away from the heat of the turbo.

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I strongly suspect that I am reinventing the wheel, but currently thinking that the alternator will be mounted up high on the later alternator/AC bracket, and then the later style PS pump will be mounted down low.

Side note on the steering racks.
Rough numbers, but the manual rack has 4.3 turns lock to lock, the older(?) PS rack is 3.5 turns, the newer(?) PS rack is 3.25.
These don’t allow for the travel of the racks, but considering the amount of lock a 240 has, it supports my theory that a PS 240 has fairly quick steering for a car of their age/type.

Began cutting out the rusty battery tray, and realised the inner guard was a lot rustier than I thought - what looked like a hole about the size of a 50c coin, was much larger.

So I cut the whole lot of crappy metal out.
Tried to make it a fairly regular shape to make the patch easier to make, but then wondered about maybe fitting the PS oil cooler over this hole.
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Mounted the intercooler.
All a bit rough and ready but should do the job.

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I will make the top brackets tidier when I get around to it… Image description

Committed to fitting the Tilton “forward mount” pedal box. It’s ridiculous overkill for this project, but it came as part of a package deal and owes me nothing, so I’m happy enough to fit a $1000 pedal box to a $300 car.

Roughed out where it will fit, but had to stop until the dash is back in and the exact location of the steering column is known. Image description

I have taken educated guesses on the sizes of the master cylinders.
I have gone with 3/4” for the brakes and 7/8” for the clutch. For the clutch, I calculated it off the standard pedal ratio and adjusted it for the 6.9:1 ratio of the Tilton.
For the brakes, Petey is running the same front calipers with 5/8” masters, so the maths says that 3/4” is good with the extra pedal ratio of the Tilton.

Time will tell if any of this is right!

Cleaned up the interior a bit this morning, ahead of test fitting the dash and to make the fire extinguisher mount.
Somehow that snowballed into taking all the tar off the floors and the firewall.

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The sections under the front seats were the worst by far, with the rear floors and the transmission tunnel both being super easy.

Still need to do the boot, the rear parcel shelf and the part under the rear seat, but a bit over 10kg has been removed already.

Rust repairs. Image description
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Was supposed to be fixing the exhaust on the Falcon, but it started raining so I played with the 244 instead…

11 days later

Pedal box progress.
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The 7/8” master cylinder reservoir is too big under the strut tower, so I have bought one with a smaller reservoir like the brake MCs.

Removed some more tar off the floor - only bit left is the stuff on the inside of the rear quarter and the underside of the roof.

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Earlier estimate of about 20kg of floor tar still seems about right.

The tailshaft centre bearing … usual 240 tailshaft bolts being a turd to remove, and confirmed the bearing is stuffed.
Seems that the seal on bearing was damaged and allowed moisture in, which has then rusted when the car sat around.

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The bearing came off fairly nicely and now I have to wait for the new ones to arrive.
I measured the old one and it comes up as a 6009 2RS. I bought four of them off eBay for about 150% of the price of one “Volvo centre bearing”.

Onto mounting the fuel system.

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Fuel tank needs another strap (side to side), but it is close to where it needs to be. Image description

Dash back in place. It has been bent in the past, for reasons that I don’t understand. Makes reassembly a real turd.

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Other news is that the bell housing has a big weld repair… and another new crack.
I can only assume that there is something pretty significantly wrong with this box/clutch/flywheel.

The car came with a M45 and another clutch/FW, so I think it will all have to go in. I had been hoping to keep the M40 and probably fit an early 140 box at a later date, but apparently not.
(The early 140 M40 has less terrible ratios than the early 240 M40, which has less terrible ratios than the M45).

Maybe something will happen with a spare Toyota Crown M40 box in the future.
Or maybe not.

Anyway, it is about to be evicted from the shed so I can do some work on some other people’s cars.

3 months later

This has been pushed into the backyard while a whole bunch of other things happen in my life, but I have bought a few things for it, like a rollover valve for the fuel tank.

But I have mostly been ignoring it.

Inadvertently, I made progress…

I bought a set of 15x7 Performance Superlite wheels cheaply a few weeks ago … but couldn’t pick them up until earlier this week due to broken arm shenanigans.
They were supposed to be 4x114.3 stud pattern and +30ish offset. This meant I could use them on a number of different cars…
Except they turned out to be 4x108 and +12, which is a lot less useful. The offset means that adaptor spacers aren’t a viable option.

After a bunch of head-scratching, I figured that 4x108 is a starting point to convert them to 5x108 and then they can be used on one of the 240s.

So anyway, I spent ages trying to work out if I can mark them up accurately enough.

Short answer is yes.

After a bunch of messing around and not being happy with the results, I machined up this spacer to find the centre of one of the stud holes (yes, “Spac bought himself a lathe” is probably going to be a recurring feature for a while now… 😆)

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Having a stable, reasonably accurate centre is one part of it, but having the centre at the same height as the mounting face also improves accuracy.

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The other big step was to have a measurement from one stud to the “opposite” stud AS WELL AS the measurement to the adjacent studs. Image description

So yeah, I reckon I can find the location of the holes to convert to 5x108.
Next task will be to work out a way to drill those holes accurately… without just buying a milling machine…

IMO you will want a mill. I think you can drill the through-holes without a mill, you do everything on a pedestal drill:

centre punch
spot drill
drill undersize
ream to 12mm (or whatever final size is)

But you also will need a counterbore or a taper I assume, which will be difficult to do, you can get counter boring bits with a pilot that will be a close fit to the reamed holes, but on a pedestal drill it will chatter like crazy and may even send things flying.

tl;dr buy a mill buy a mill buy a mill buy a mill buy a mill

    jamesinc

    Yeh… I have an old drill press that I have been considering turning into a sort of radial arm drill.

    Like always, the question is whether it’s worth the time and effort for an indeterminate outcome.
    I also don’t have space for a decent sized mill.
    If I spend the money, I want it to be large enough to do a Redblock cylinder head at least…

    A 740/940 alternator /ps bracket may do what you want regarding moving away from the heat.

      dmc The problem with using 7/9 alt/PS brackets might be the various accessories intruding into the space for the block mounted distributor.

      Fiddling with the drill idea this morning. Image description
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      A bit of die-grinding and a bit of hole-sawing means that the head can move up and down on the column. There’s about 300mm of travel, plus the 50mm of plunge that’s built into the drill press.

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      Yes, the belt clears… although it is close in the middle position/speed. Image description

      Next step will be to make a frame that allows it to sit over the top of a wheel while being rigid and square.

      Screw you guys!

      This happened today… Image description

      Turns out that it belongs to one of my rally mates from a long time ago… will go and get it during the week.

        The door strap looks like one from a 140. I reckon I have a spare you can have.