Tuesday 31 May 2011

Radiator Removal

The radiator is out, ready for recore.

Radiator04

Radiator03


You can see in the picture below the large patch, smack in the centre of the cores.

Radiator01


You can also see the top tank connection is above the bottom tank connection. Hmmm... it would be nice for them to be diagonally opposite. Might look at putting the top tank connection on the left like this 1966 Impala.

66 Impala 01


Each time I work on the Impala, I am amazed at the acres of real estate available under the bonnet... well, anywhere for that matter.

Kicking Goals

After a quick zap on the charger, the charger's magic green LED is gleaming, indicating the battery as fully charged... which is good news! I was worried the battery was damaged and wouldn't take a charge, but all looks good. Need to drop it in and see how it goes cranking the Chev over.

The other good news is managing to track-down the Factory Assembly Manual, Chassis Service Manual and Wiring Diagram... thanks ChevyTalk!

The radiator is currently draining in readiness for removal, then a re-core.

Monday 30 May 2011

Sunday 29 May 2011

Charge!

Sunday 29.05.2011

Picked-up a cheap battery charger from K-Mart on Sunday. Doesn’t turn off when charged… hmmm. Might swap for a better one.

Impala02

Anyway, charged the battery for 16.5 hours (1600 Sun to 0830 Mon) and the charger was still showing that it was charging (i.e. the battery wasn’t fully charged). Might try a few hours of charging tonight to see what happens.

Also grabbed a halogen work light (you can see it in the background of the above photo) and a (my first ever) deodoriser for the car ;-)

Impala03

Saturday 28 May 2011

So it begins...

Reorganised the garage and unloaded Joe’s Saab with any tools that he had and I didn’t. The kids loved the creeper. Must remember to get some threaded axle stands to replace dad’s lightweight ones. Can’t believe the number of cool tools Joe has!

Tried to open the boot. No good. Both keys failed, even after a squirt of WD40. Locksmith time it seems.

Quickly found that the battery was flat. It had started ok on Thu, so there was some residual current that was enough to drain the battery in two days. Need to get on top of that.

So, time to jump start the Impala to check the charging voltage and charge the battery. Problem, Impala battery is at the front right and the car is hard over to the right in the garage. Backed the Sportswagon into the garage (battery at rear left) and juuust managed to get the leads to reach. Finally got the impala started!

Of course the next thing is to run out of petrol! I do a servo run with 20L Jerry can and 2 x 5L cans to pick up Optimax (98RON) and some Valve Master (valve seat protection additive). Added petrol, keeping a bit in one 5L tin to pour down the carby (good remembering Joe)! Managed to start a fire in the carby during one of the start attempts, so I had to hurriedly smother it with rags.

Measured the charging voltage and it was a bit over 15V, seems a smidge too high. Found this…
Chevy Talk

Another interesting read…
Mad Electrical

Another interesting read…
http://persh.org/Pickup/Alternator.htm

We then connected the multimeter in series to measure the current draw with everything shut off. 0.14 A. Turn on a light an instantly blew the meter’s fuse. D’oh! Like idiots, we had forgotten to switch from the fused 1200mA lead connection on the meter to the 10A socket . Another thing for the list… multimeter fuse.

Time to check the lights. Surprisingly, more lights worked than I had first thought… almost all of them in fact!

The parking lights are small orange rectangular lenses at the front. When the indicator is actuated, the corresponding side flashes. For me, both front parker lights work, but the left front indicator doesn’t.

Low beam is two of the headlights and high beam is all four headlights. All work fine.

At the rear, there are six red taillights. The four outer lights work as tail lights, brake lights and flash as indicators. All work The two inner lights (on the boot lid) don’t work at all. There are no lights that come on when in reverse, so not sure if the inner lights are supposed to be reverse lights or whether they are dummy lights and there are no reverse lights on the car.

Didn’t check the number plate lights. D’oh! Must do that.

Joe drove the car down the drive and – the champion is his – gave it a wash. It was pretty filthy, so looked great once clean!

Impala01

Battery was flat, so after a quick borrow of the Saab’s battery, we soon had the Impala back in the garage.

The radiator is leaking, so the patch isn’t holding. I just had a thought, perhaps the top/bottom hoses are connected properly. I’ll check that, but it looks like a radiator re-core is on the cards.

Perhaps this with an external transmission cooler…
eBay Radiator

Ooo.. almost forgot. Exhaust manifold leak.


To-do list…
- battery clamp
- rear exhaust hanger
- boot lock
- new keys cut
- current leak
- charging voltage
- multi-meter fuse
- front left indicator
- reverse lights?
- number plate lights?
- Exhaust manifold leak

Thursday 26 May 2011

Arrival!

After an overnight trip up the Hume, the Impala arrived via quick-lift on Thu 26.05.2011 at ~ 11:30 AM.

ImpalaArrival04

What a car! Sooo glad to finally drive the car up the driveway.
The drive off the quick-lift showed a trail of tranny fluid down the tray of the truck. A quick look underneath showed the culprit... a hastily fitted hose to the transmission cooler was leaking. Nipping up the clamp soon solved that.

Initial thoughts...
- better body than I had expected, despite being in need of a wash (Sat's job)
- over the moon that is started on the key and idled perfectly
- super super light steering with no feedback at all
- wide like no other car I can remember driving
- happy we managed to get it to fit in the garage!

ImpalaArrival07

ImpalaArrival15

ImpalaArrival13

Straight away I can see the battery needs retaining and the rear exhaust hanger needs replacing.

To-do list...
- battery clamp
- rear exhaust hanger