SunnyTim's Nitro Factory Black FB 215
Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
tim there is an i think FB standard in a wreckers sort of near me (about 70ks away) so if there's standard specific bits needed maybe they have them, i know the dash is gone the tail lights are there and front windscreen suround is there it's a honey beige car
sometimes yor just better off shitting in yor hands and clapping
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
Good stuff Tim...you make it sound easy!Sounds easy right
Feelin free in a '61 FB.
Member of FB-EK Holden Car Club Of NSW Inc.
Check out the Rebuild of Old Timer
Member of FB-EK Holden Car Club Of NSW Inc.
Check out the Rebuild of Old Timer
Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
Great condition for a car that has sat where it has for so long .
[img]http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f177/trevwood/WOOFTOsmall.jpg[/img]
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Woofto Car Club Member No3
Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
i'm pretty sure they were making a new clear and i don't know where you are using it but the clear that i know of that they have wasn't UV stable so will dull off over time in direct sunlight
sometimes yor just better off shitting in yor hands and clapping
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
I first saw it there when I was 18 so its def been there for at least 12years
Run what ya brung and hope it's enough
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
Run what ya brung and hope it's enough
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
SunnyTim wrote:
hhmm satin black.
I'm even more excited the guys at the paint shop showed me KBS clear coat today. 6 times tougher than 2 pac clear and it sprays on like acrylic
Tim
Where are you using this clear coat? I will be interested to see what you think of it. Sounds to be just what I am looking for too. I have used their other rust products and found them good. But not this one.
Keep us posted
Brian
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
Try Taylors!! Best quality I have found. I paid $65 ea for left and right subframe sections (sway bar mount area).SunnyTim wrote:so where have people been buying their subframe repair sections? Rares seem $40 dearer than Betta Rubber
Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
Have you tired going to ebay and punching in Holden+ek+rust? Sometimes they come up, certain I've seen em'!.. I just tired and nothing did, but maybe shoot the guys selling other rust sections an email to find out. I usually type a few generic senances asking if they have em (whatever it might be that I need) - how much with postage and how long, copy it and then send it to everyone in the universe! .. Even santa - He gives stuff away
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
damn...that rust can be lurking everywhere.Here's where I finished up, one step forward four steps back
Feelin free in a '61 FB.
Member of FB-EK Holden Car Club Of NSW Inc.
Check out the Rebuild of Old Timer
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Check out the Rebuild of Old Timer
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
Hey Tim I went past the yard last week and the old girls mate is still sitting there. If you hurry up and do this one you can do the other one as well
Run what ya brung and hope it's enough
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Re: I'm VERY VERY EXCITED
Hey there people I had been talking to a few of our local club members about this car when tim bought it
I've only now had the time to look at the photos you've posted, from what I can see it is the car we discussed in our PMs Tim.
our PM conversation is pasted below for everyone else who doesn't know what's going on.
Sent: Sun Sep 02, 2012 11:00 pm
by SunnyTim
Hi Alison I only just saw your post All I know about the car is that it came to Finley in around 1968 when a man moved to town with his family, and then it went to another owner, then a young kid, then to the guy I bought it from (who has had it around 15 years sitting in the yard on the north end of town.
I would appreciate any links to the vehicles history, as it will be restored and driving through FInley in June next year
Tim
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:19 pm
by holdenutechick
Based on what dad has told me he doesn't remember when Uncle Gordon acquired the EK but he was the second owner.
Uncle Gordon was known around this area as Black as he was known to tinker for hours and come home all covered in oil, he died in 1996 from a heart attack and stroke, I was 8 at the time, after Blacks death his brother (my grandfather) held a clearing sale where all his cars found new homes, dad believes that the EK went home with a young guy who wanted to put a bigger engine in it so it seems to match what you've been told.
When I was very little I was very fond of hide and seek, there was one time I climbed in the EK to hide and fell asleep on the back seat after looking for me for 2 hours it was the last time dad allowed us to play outdoor hide and seek.
Another memory I have was climbing underneath and up into the engine area when the engine was out being fixed and I remember reading the numbers, my grandmother had a photo of me taken by my grandfather in the shed when I was little passing Uncle Black spanners and tools while he was working on a grey pretty sure it was the EKs either that or the one from his morning grey FB ute which based on a few repair spots I believe to be the one I'm working on
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:32 pm
by SunnyTim
Alison
Wow thankyou for sharing this information.
The car is an FB, but if it is the black one it makes a hell of a lot of sense now that it was sold at a clearing sale, as under the bonnet is a number left by yellow paint pen or marker. We thought it might have been from a wreckers, but this now ads up.
I would really love to know anything you might be able to gain further from your family in regards the history of the car. I will definitely be restoring it to get back on the road (not a task for the faint hearted, but hey )
What a spin out that you also have your G uncle's ute also. Great to know that they will possibly get to see each other again.
I wonder if any of your family would have a photo where the car is parked in the background or something?
Love to hear more if you can find anything else out.
Tim
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:55 pm
by holdenutechick
Uncle Black didn't have any children so the only one with info is dad and I've pretty much told you everything he told me.
I can probably explain the markings in that Uncle Black had a habit if he dismantled something he'd put numbers on them to put them back together, though he usually used chalk.
FB? yeah I think so as I remember it had the FB bonnet bar but EK hubcaps, (I found one in a paddock its hanging on the wall in my shed).
Dad said it was an EK, though now that I think about it Dad doesn't know the difference.
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:59 pm
by SunnyTim
cool, well funnily enough I thought it was an EK when I first saw it as it had EK side moulds fitted to it at some stage
After looking the photos I will tell you that the number under the bonnet was from a wrecker if I remember correctly the front end had a nasty meeting with a kangaroo, I was only about 5 or 6 when it happened but I remember grandpa, dad and black pushing her into the machinery shed and a few days later taking the whole front off and bolting a new front on.
Word of warning Tim my uncle was an inventor and was known to if he didn't have what he needed on hand to fix something to make tools or repair items out of anything he could find, I can't help but wonder if it still has the original fuel tank? why I ask is that I remember my grandfather telling me a story when I was about 10 that there was a time when the fuel guage was off so Black got under the car and used his feet to push up on the tank and put a dent in it which somehow made the float read right.
I will be following this thread with much enthusiasm I think Black would be very surprised that his cheap farm run around is getting fixed up to him it was just a cheap car to run, don't want to be the bearer of bad news but it was common for a sheep or two be shoved in the back when his ute was out of order and the rust near the back seat I believe was caused by sheep urine can't get more of a farm car then that.
I've only now had the time to look at the photos you've posted, from what I can see it is the car we discussed in our PMs Tim.
our PM conversation is pasted below for everyone else who doesn't know what's going on.
Sent: Sun Sep 02, 2012 11:00 pm
by SunnyTim
Hi Alison I only just saw your post All I know about the car is that it came to Finley in around 1968 when a man moved to town with his family, and then it went to another owner, then a young kid, then to the guy I bought it from (who has had it around 15 years sitting in the yard on the north end of town.
I would appreciate any links to the vehicles history, as it will be restored and driving through FInley in June next year
Tim
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:19 pm
by holdenutechick
Based on what dad has told me he doesn't remember when Uncle Gordon acquired the EK but he was the second owner.
Uncle Gordon was known around this area as Black as he was known to tinker for hours and come home all covered in oil, he died in 1996 from a heart attack and stroke, I was 8 at the time, after Blacks death his brother (my grandfather) held a clearing sale where all his cars found new homes, dad believes that the EK went home with a young guy who wanted to put a bigger engine in it so it seems to match what you've been told.
When I was very little I was very fond of hide and seek, there was one time I climbed in the EK to hide and fell asleep on the back seat after looking for me for 2 hours it was the last time dad allowed us to play outdoor hide and seek.
Another memory I have was climbing underneath and up into the engine area when the engine was out being fixed and I remember reading the numbers, my grandmother had a photo of me taken by my grandfather in the shed when I was little passing Uncle Black spanners and tools while he was working on a grey pretty sure it was the EKs either that or the one from his morning grey FB ute which based on a few repair spots I believe to be the one I'm working on
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:32 pm
by SunnyTim
Alison
Wow thankyou for sharing this information.
The car is an FB, but if it is the black one it makes a hell of a lot of sense now that it was sold at a clearing sale, as under the bonnet is a number left by yellow paint pen or marker. We thought it might have been from a wreckers, but this now ads up.
I would really love to know anything you might be able to gain further from your family in regards the history of the car. I will definitely be restoring it to get back on the road (not a task for the faint hearted, but hey )
What a spin out that you also have your G uncle's ute also. Great to know that they will possibly get to see each other again.
I wonder if any of your family would have a photo where the car is parked in the background or something?
Love to hear more if you can find anything else out.
Tim
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:55 pm
by holdenutechick
Uncle Black didn't have any children so the only one with info is dad and I've pretty much told you everything he told me.
I can probably explain the markings in that Uncle Black had a habit if he dismantled something he'd put numbers on them to put them back together, though he usually used chalk.
FB? yeah I think so as I remember it had the FB bonnet bar but EK hubcaps, (I found one in a paddock its hanging on the wall in my shed).
Dad said it was an EK, though now that I think about it Dad doesn't know the difference.
Sent: Mon Sep 03, 2012 9:59 pm
by SunnyTim
cool, well funnily enough I thought it was an EK when I first saw it as it had EK side moulds fitted to it at some stage
After looking the photos I will tell you that the number under the bonnet was from a wrecker if I remember correctly the front end had a nasty meeting with a kangaroo, I was only about 5 or 6 when it happened but I remember grandpa, dad and black pushing her into the machinery shed and a few days later taking the whole front off and bolting a new front on.
Word of warning Tim my uncle was an inventor and was known to if he didn't have what he needed on hand to fix something to make tools or repair items out of anything he could find, I can't help but wonder if it still has the original fuel tank? why I ask is that I remember my grandfather telling me a story when I was about 10 that there was a time when the fuel guage was off so Black got under the car and used his feet to push up on the tank and put a dent in it which somehow made the float read right.
I will be following this thread with much enthusiasm I think Black would be very surprised that his cheap farm run around is getting fixed up to him it was just a cheap car to run, don't want to be the bearer of bad news but it was common for a sheep or two be shoved in the back when his ute was out of order and the rust near the back seat I believe was caused by sheep urine can't get more of a farm car then that.
~Allison
My project:
'60 Holden FB ute
Other family projects:
Mum's '54 FJ Holden Special Sedan
Farm Bedford grain truck
My project:
'60 Holden FB ute
Other family projects:
Mum's '54 FJ Holden Special Sedan
Farm Bedford grain truck