Background first - KAS is a 1958 four door Moggie made in England (naturally) and immediately exported to Zimbabwe where it spent all its life until 2002 when it came home with its owner. Many of you will remember this car was for sale in Stanford Hall some years ago where it was bought by an Irish member, and now its mine.
But... in playing around with the car today (see post in the electrical section) I decided to take off the plate covering the traficators and I found some original (i presume) African occupants - three insect nests (empty). Isn't that mad P.S. the nests are the light coloured things that look like someone stuck chewing gum in there.
The first nest. Unfortunatly it broke away and fell down the B pillar when I put the traficator back in
There is another bigger one on the other side too, and a third in the passenger side as well.
Incidently - the traficators have been disconnected as the car is fitted with front and rear flashing indicators. How do I go about getting the traficators working again ??
Gertie, 1962 Saloon, Milly, 1969 Traveller (ex APL 971H) and now KAS 1958 4 Door Saloon.
[img]http://i156.photobucket.com/albums/t28/iandromiskin/DSC_0051-1.jpg[/img][img]http://i156.photobucket.com/albums/t28/iandromiskin/Picture112.jpg[/img][img]http://i156.photobucket.com/albums/t28/iandromiskin/Picture366.jpg[/img]
just done my 61 saloon very easy the wires from the traficators run into the boot where they join the rear indicator wires with double bullet conectors
bigjohn wrote:just done my 61 saloon very easy the wires from the traficators run into the boot where they join the rear indicator wires with double bullet conectors
Wired like that wouldn't it mean that you trafficators pop in and out with the flashing of the indicators? Or have you got an extra relay in there you haven't told us about?
Andy W____________1961 2-door 948cc (Sidney)_____________1963 2-door 1275cc (Emily)_______
Shortend parcel shelf ??? Not sure. It has a parcel shelf all right but it doesn't look shortened or cut in any way. It was the car for sale at Stanford Hall. Really good underside but horrible paintwork which put a lot of people off.
Gertie, 1962 Saloon, Milly, 1969 Traveller (ex APL 971H) and now KAS 1958 4 Door Saloon.
[img]http://i156.photobucket.com/albums/t28/iandromiskin/DSC_0051-1.jpg[/img][img]http://i156.photobucket.com/albums/t28/iandromiskin/Picture112.jpg[/img][img]http://i156.photobucket.com/albums/t28/iandromiskin/Picture366.jpg[/img]
im thinking of a green 4 door where the parcel shelf stopped fefore the steering coloum and didnt come any further out. must be another one then. Well as long as you dont have any residents living in it you'll be ok!!!
Talking of former residents ive just removed 3 fieldmouse nests in the sill cavities and about 200 odd used hazlenuts and fir cone stems from within the air intake duct under the footwell. Theres a great big pile of it under the car now - makes a change from piles of rust!!!
That was common on the earlier cars, I believe. They extended it in later years (perhaps the late 50's?) to make it more useable. For those cars, a fascia panel was used to direct the heater output through a slot in the shelf.
Happy Minoring!
Phyllis ~ 1962 Morris Minor 4 Door Deluxe
Black coachwork with Red Duo-Tone Upholstery
Easiest way of having trafficators and indicators, I've found is to have the original constant 12v supply to the switch so it can be directed left and right. From the switch, this feeds the appropiate trafficator, and a flasher unit that powers the indiactors on that side. So you have two separate flasher units one for each side fed from the wire that goes to the trafficator. Hope that makes sense - it gives the constant 12v supply to the trafficators and flashing supply to the bulbs at each end. The flasher units can be tucked under the dash out of sight if you want it to look original.
cheers
Iain
Fairmile Restorations.
'49 MM, '53 convertible, '55 van, and a '64 van.
Marina p.u., '56 Morris Isis Traveller, a '59 Morris JB van, a'66 J4 van, a '54 Land Rover, Land Rover 130, Renault 5, '36Railton, '35 Hudson, a Mk1 Transit and a Sherpa Camper...
A car can be restored at any time, but is only original once!
Yes, thats the one! Saw a car some time ago where the bulb flashed in the trafficators which looked quite neat. Presumably an extra wire from the flashing part of the circuit was routed to the trafficators to power just the bulb.
cheers
Iain
Fairmile Restorations.
'49 MM, '53 convertible, '55 van, and a '64 van.
Marina p.u., '56 Morris Isis Traveller, a '59 Morris JB van, a'66 J4 van, a '54 Land Rover, Land Rover 130, Renault 5, '36Railton, '35 Hudson, a Mk1 Transit and a Sherpa Camper...
A car can be restored at any time, but is only original once!
It may be that the bulb flashes faster than the arm can go up and down, otherwise the wiring to the bulb has to be insulated from the trafficator wiring. I would be interested to see a wiring diagram for that arrangement
Me too. I wondered how it had been done. Saw it on a car coming back from an East Yorks branch do at Fort Paul a few years back. Looked quite effective, and sort of turned the trafficator into a 'side repeater' from a quaint anachronism to a practical feature for modern driving...
cheers
Iain
Fairmile Restorations.
'49 MM, '53 convertible, '55 van, and a '64 van.
Marina p.u., '56 Morris Isis Traveller, a '59 Morris JB van, a'66 J4 van, a '54 Land Rover, Land Rover 130, Renault 5, '36Railton, '35 Hudson, a Mk1 Transit and a Sherpa Camper...
A car can be restored at any time, but is only original once!