It snowed last night and although it is mild out today, a good reason to fire up the propane heater in the garage and get working on the Europa. The objective for today was to get the headers installed, the generator and associated brackets and washer spacers installed, run the speedo cable thru the chassis and hopefully get the balance of the shifter linkage installed.
I had SS exhaust studs to install, but first had to remove the studs already in the head. All came out easily except for one which the threads stripped immediately when I used my stud remover. Tried everything, the darn thing wouldn't budge. Contacted my friend Drew who said "use a torch to get the stud cherry red (not the aluminum head) and then let it cool. Use vise grips to remove. Worked like a charm.
Chris came over to help (its always great to have another set of hands and someone to bounce ideas off of) and I set him on installing the headers while I worked on the other more mundane stuff. He put never seize on each of the studs, then installed the gaskets, finally lining up the headers to the studs and gaskets. Of course, nothing is every as easy as it looks when your installing custom anything. Two of the header flanges were interfering with the block threaded cap bolts. I could either go to the store and get new bolts or grind a notch in two of the flanges. We agreed to grind. Chris did a great job with the SS headers.
Installing the generator, bracket and spacer washers was easy. Installing the speedo cable at the transaxle and then routing thru the chassis was also no issue (although a bit time consuming).
The shifter tubes.......well, that is another story. Ever since I bought the car I have been reading about the sloppiness of the shifter (finding gears can be a challenge) and no one (that I know of) has created a solution for the 352 four speed transaxle that make shifting more precise. Now, the original shift tubes and associated hardware that was on the car was very worn (u-joints sloppy and a few cracks in the metal holding the u-joints). Then there was the issue of many holes drilled thru the collar of the ends of the shift tubes for worn pins. I had another set of shift tubes from the other Europa I bought for the Weber TC engine and a third set I bought on ebay. All of them had some issue or another and none of the them were perfect. I had thought combining the various parts and pieces would be the best solution, but after installing and looking closely Chris and I agreed that finding new OEM shift tubes would be best. Then I could use locking nuts and drill my own holes. By the way, I had bought the new u-joint design for between the two tubes from RD Enterprises. Has anyone installed this in their car?
Media blasted some of the shifter parts for painting while I am on the hunt for front and rear tubes.