Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Hibernation Time

After a two week cross country trip, Mutt arrived in Vermont on a 28 degree day. 

 Here Joe is lowering the lift back to the ground. Note only the left brake lights are on - turn signal isn't centered. 

Thelma and Louise ready for their ride. You'd never guess it's 28 degrees out from their smiles. 

Sitting next to the carrier after the cross country trek.

Heading into the barn for hibernation. Hope spring comes soon.

Covered and getting closed in for the winter.

All tucked in.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

The Big Move

Susan and I relocated to Vermont in March, but I continue to work in California. After about six months, we decided maintaining households on two coasts was too much, so it was time to sell the house in California, and move the essentials to Vermont.
Open carrier was out of the question, so I hired Intercity Lines to move the car cross country. They move a lot of Jay Leno's cars, so if it was good enough for Jay, it's good enough for me.

Mutt was the first car in the van, getting the high berth in the front.  

 In she goes.

Parked in her berth. The left turn signal was set the whole trip cross country. 

Monday, September 16, 2013

Finished Interior

One of the last things to finish on the car was the interior. After having life disrupted with an unplanned relocation to Vermont, I decided to have Little John over at Interior Concepts & Design have his team finish the interior. John is the interior technical expert for the Southern California Solid Axle Corvette Club, and has a beautiful C1 of his own. 

Mutt went into the shop with a white top that didn't have all the weatherstripping installed, but the top wasn't properly installed, so John sold me on his custom top. He did it with a modern cloth matching the interior color, rather than the vinyl of the originals, and he has a custom removable rear window that he does on C1 Corvettes.  True to his prediction, the rear window hasn't come out of it's storage bag yet.

The interior is 1970 Corvette Light Saddle. Al Knock did the carpet kit, molded dash and door panels and seat covers, though John's team cleaned up the door panels and significantly reworked the seats.

Rather than the original springs, the seats are now on John's custom molded Urethane cores, giving a much more comfortable seat, and eliminating the out of phase harmonics with the C4 suspension. John sits customers to get the appropriate seat height, so the core is a lot shorter than the stock C1 seat to match my long torso.

 The passenger package tray was installed for the first time in the 17 years I've owned the car. Who knows how long it was missing before that.

I just wanted a simple mat in the trunk, but my wife convinced me a proper finish to the trunk was what the car really needed. 

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Donut Derelicts

Mutt spent last week at CW Restoration getting a few paint blemishes cleaned up. Last night I got the rest of the trim on the nose, and got the grille in for the first time. 


This morning my son Jonathan and I took her down for her debut at Adams Street Donuts - home of the Donut Derelicts. When we got there at 6 am, the parking lot was pretty full. Always the eclectic collection of cars, including a steamer, late model Corvettes and Vipers, and everything in between.


Jonathan and I stood off to the side and watched the action around Mutt. Interestingly, most folks paid attention to the late model LS motor under the hood, but nearly everybody missed the fender flares, the C4 suspension underneath, and the other modifications that make Muttvette a Mutt. 


I need to get the front bumper on this weekend, and need to get the car over to Little John to get the interior finished up. The serpentine drive also needs work - the belt has been squealing, and a quick look last night let me see it flopping between the crank and alternator. Looks like I need an idler on that side to keep it from bouncing on the water neck. I've als got to diagnose why I'm throwing P0171 / P0174 codes - System Too Lean - did a visual for vacuum leaks last night, but didn't see anything obvious. Overall, put about 9 miles on today, and 6 miles up and back to the shop, so finally getting miles on the car.

Monday, February 18, 2013

First Real Drive

Progress has been in fits and starts over the last several months with a small birthday for my wife and the celebratory European cruise, the birth of a grandchild, and a trip to Mexico to build a house for a needy family. Over this time was a number of Gilligan's Island projects - getting all the stainless on the doors and fenders, reforming one end of a piece of stainless that was too long, putting the door glass back in, drilling out parking light sockets and fitting in new snap-in sockets, and a host of other small details. The September  list of  to does is nearly done, and with an emergency trip to Vermont, decided to see if CW Restoration could take the car for a few days to knock out a few clean-up details that were required, several  self-inflicted. 
Putting gas in at a gas station - felt good except for the $4.399 price for 91 octane.

Heading over to the shop. She sounds good, but there's a belt squeal I've got to deal with when she comes home next week. 

Sitting in the driveway - door locks, stainless, door post and door glass all installed. All that's left is the felts and stainless around the door glass. 

The dark side. Red's pretty deep in the shade. 

And a lot more orange in the sun. I think I ended up with Torch Red instead of the Victory Red I intended, but it looks great just the same. 

After I finish up the front trim, grille and bumper, it will be time to get it to an upholstery shop to finish the interior. At this time it's spend the money rather than another four months of little details in my spare time.