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mid 80s Rolls Royce a bad idea for a daily?
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This place isn't exactly the prime resource for this shit. The backwoods motherfuckers on here don't think anything will run that's not a foxbody or C5 Corvette.
But seriously, it's a terrible fucking idea. This coming from someone who owns an Alfa.
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Ok ok ok.
How about this 64 Caddy Fleetwood?
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Originally posted by CWO View Post"If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford
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80's rolls sounds like an interesting swap project. It may take some effort to swap out all the cancer on things like windows, locks, wiring, etc. Hell I'd probably swap everything if I was going to swap drivetrain just for peace of mind. Would be pretty nice to make nice power and sound, and do it in a rolls royce package
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I saw this about a team that ran a lemons event in one:
A bit of background on how the brakes work on this car, bear with me. If you care, or skip this paragraph. There are three separate hydraulic systems involved in the brakes. There are two separate high pressure systems using cam drive pumps and Citroen accumulators that make up the high pressure side of the system. There is a third system, which is a low pressure normal brake master cylinder which only operates the lower set of opposing pistons on the 4 piston rear calipers. All 4 (yes 4) front calipers are driven from the two different high pressure systems, as are the upper set of pistons in the rear calipers. The biggest reason there is this little low pressure system is to give a normal brake pedal feel. The high pressure system is just a series of valves letting high pressure through (up to 2500 PSI), and gives no feedback. In later years, they removed the low pressure system and just fitting a rubber donut under the pedal to give feedback. The fluid is a mix of castor oil and dot 3, and people at the store look at you funny when you buy castor oil in bulk.
So, we blew a hard line, which was a bubble flare, but the fitting was not exactly metric and not exactly English. We had to use some parts store bubble flares with the fittings from the rolls, and then make normal double flares in the middle to join them together, then bleed all 10 brake bleeding ports in the car. This took up most of Saturday, but we got it back out for the checker, just for the driver to report having almost no brakes as he pulled into the paddock at the checker. We tore into the “rat trap” of brake linkages and hoses under the driver’s floor and found that the low pressure master was nearly new, so bled everything out again, everything was tight and sealed and working and we knew that even if we lost the low pressure system again, it was OK as both high pressure systems were working.
"If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford
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