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- 92 & 16 Meyatas
Took her to Larz Anderson auto museum for cars and coffee
NICE! its functional and probably cheaper than buying the parts so i think it looks awesome!
Very cool! That's something I've thought about doing as well. It's probably best to get the car running and log some coolant temperatures first, though.
Nice work "chief"! Never thought of doing that myself!
Not sure I like acrylic for a shroud, but the blowout panels are a good idea.
With as thick as it is I didn't think it would be an issue, but like I said I found stress cracking on the mounts when I pulled it.
Yeah, acrylic can be a pain in the ass. Very brittle. Almost as bad as working with glass. I could potentially see ABS or Lexan working.
A job helping a friend of my wife's move got postponed so this afternoon I decided to go ahead and install the fan shroud flaps. First step was to determine how large I wanted to make the opening. I settled on 5 mm less tn the bottom and sides, and 10 mm less at the top. This would give me overlap for sealing, as well as allowing me to bolt it at the top. These flaps come with rubber fingers that are meant to hold the flap in place, but I'm running a Lexan shroud which is a lot thicker than the normal metal shrouds these are used on. Once that was done I cut a template and laid it out:
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4303/35327752004_0aaa287d90_c.jpg
[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4299/35327750574_0bbe771be0_c.jpg
Next step was to drill holes at the corners of the opening, this provides stress relief while cutting the Lexan (and it will also stop any crack from propagating should you do something wrong):
[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4330/35327749714_1e5bf25e0c_c.jpg
I then started to cut along the lines. Initially I tried using my Dremel with a cut-off wheel, however it was just melting the Lexan. Next I tried this:
[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4291/35327748634_6efe4ec7aa_c.jpg
That did the trick. There was still some melting but unless you are using some sort of cooling fluid or going exceptionally slow I don't see how you can avoid this. Got both openings cut out and then needed to clean things up.
[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4291/35997749832_77eda30a2b_c.jpg
I tried using a single-edged razor blade which worked, but at some damage to my fingers. I then figured I'd try my straight cutters:
[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4327/35997748502_3585c728c8_c.jpg
Those worked great. Once I had the edges trimmed I used a sanding wheel on the Dremel and a file to finish the clean-up.
Since I was going to be bolting the flaps in place I wanted something to spread the load out to avoid cracking of the [B]Lexan [/B]and to positively hold the flaps in place. I have some thin aluminum lying around so cut four strips out of that. Drilled three holes in each, located the strips on the shroud and drilled the holes in it. Finally I put it all together with some M4 screws and nyloc nuts. The hardest part of this was getting holes punched in the flaps, the rubber used is pretty tough. When all was said and done, I ended up with this:
[img]https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4301/35997747332_cfc936305c_c.jpg
It isn't the prettiest thing I've ever done, but I found cracking on the attachment tabs on the shroud so I'm not sure how much more life it has anyway. I doubt anyone will be looking at it that closely in any case given the location of the flaps on the shroud.[/QUOTE]
??
acrylic ... Lexan
No, he was referring to the fact that mine is made out of Lexan (as noted in my narrative). Remember, reading is fundamental...
Where the hell did I get Acrylic from then? weird
Pulled that STRAIGHT out of my ass, apparently...
Where the hell did I get Acrylic from then? weird
Pulled that STRAIGHT out of my ass, apparently...