1975 1.8 Driver Restoration, Driver quality restoration of a 1975 1.8 |
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1975 1.8 Driver Restoration, Driver quality restoration of a 1975 1.8 |
didenpx |
Oct 5 2024, 02:06 PM
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#1
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 21 Joined: 1-September 23 From: Usa Member No.: 27,556 Region Association: North East States |
I’m a newcomer to the air cooled world. I picked up a 1975 914 1.8 project car last Fall that I’m just now beginning to work on. It seems to be mechanically stock and structurally sound and has ~120K miles on what appears to be the original engine (it doesn’t look to me as if it’s ever been pulled).
I found it on Craiglist in Maine where it was in the hands of a VW bus/bug enthusiast who was the third owner and had decided to focus his energies on a bus restoration instead. It was last registered an on the road in 2017 when the second owner had it. When I bought it it lot drove and came with an assortment of Restoration Design repair panels, several spare doors from earlier cars, some foglight front bumpers, spare seats, etc.. In a first for me when it comes to project cars the electrics all function properly and appear never to have been monkeyed with. Lights, blinkers, engine heater fan, hazards, everything. Photos below tell the story but the worst of the rust appears to be in the aft section of the LH outer longitudinal. I haven’t pulled the battery and ECU out yet, but from what I can see underneath the car, inside the engine bay, and between the quarter panel and the engine compartment tin the hell hole appears solid (but I’m prepared to find surprises). The rear of the car seems worst off with rot from the foam above the tail lights partially cut out and partially corrected (I’ll be cutting that all back out and starting the job fresh). It was also hit from behind on the LH side and although I haven’t measured everything out yet, from what I can see underneath things don’t seem to be out of whack (maybe wishful thinking as the panel gaps for the rear trunk are uneven). The trunk lid itself somehow didn’t rust out along the rear edge, but it’s suffered a lot of abuse in the form of a now missing luggage rack and a black fiberglass spoiler that had been attached with wood screws. The front of the car doesn’t show any signs of impact damage but the trunk lid sits high when latched on the LH side. My plans are to do a driver quality restoration (between a Hagerty 2 and 3) and get it on the road where I can enjoy it; I’ll cut out and weld the rusty sections, do as much of the body work myself as possible (thankfully it is very straight and the paint meter indicates there shouldn’t be a lot of bondo hiding under the old re-spray) and get a professional re-spray at a local body shop. I’ll either farm out or attempt to DIY the engine work myself. Since I’m assuming the engine will need a rebuild (see below) I’d definitely like to increase the displacement while staying with the stock FI setup. I just started assessing the car in the last couple of weeks and have focused on the health of the engine. It’s still got the original L-jet FI (which I intend to keep). When I got it, it fired up easily but was extremely lumpy and stumbled badly coming off idle. After fixing vacuum hose routing (mostly anyways), adjusting points, doing timing, and adjusting valves it idles well at 850 rpm, sounds much healthier, and revs up from idle nicely (all this is based on stationary testing as the car is not on the road). Today I warmed the engine up and did compression test (throttle propped open with screwdriver) followed by a leak down test. I think the results tell me that I have a tired engine needing rebuilding: Cylinder Compression Leakdown 1 105 15% 2 105 20% 3 105 21% 4 105 23% I didn’t crawl around under the car to listen for leaking valves, but for each the cylinders I could hear hissing in the crankcase as soon as I pressurized the cylinders, which I assume is a bad thing. I’m going to discuss rebuild options at a local multi-generation family garage that started out as a VW shop; if they can do the work within my budget then I’ll probably go that route. I plan to drop the engine sometime late this month. One thing I need help on at this point is figuring out the remaining vacuum lines. I have a large inlet on the air box that looks from the diagrams as if it should go to the charcoal canister but there was no hose on it when I got the car and I don’t know where it should be routed, or even where the canister is (is it that plastic contraption sitting on top of the fuel tank!?). And just yesterday I noticed there is another nipple on the metal thing that the coil bracket attaches to…what’s that supposed to go to?? Looking forward to sharing my progress. This is a great forum that I’ve already learned a lot from! Attached image(s) |
technicalninja |
Oct 5 2024, 06:52 PM
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#2
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 2,091 Joined: 31-January 23 From: Granbury Texas Member No.: 27,135 Region Association: Southwest Region |
You have enough engine to get it through the resurrection...
It has a staggering 70-80 hp and, if you've ever driven a modern car, won't be enough! You end up with this cool little sportscar that is slower accelerating than almost ANY new car made today. That's not my "cup of tea"! I researched the high power T4 route pretty hard. I've purchased most of the core parts I need already. Couple of 2.0L T4 cores, bunch of intake stuff, both FI and IDF (40 and 44s), cams, distributors, etc... After a year of being on this site, due to the issues I've seen others report, I've decided to NOT walk the T4 path. I'll be doing a swap in my near perfect 75. Current candidates are 99 Boxster 2.5L/ 5 speed (I have a complete donor car that runs) or a 3.6L GM LGX V6 / Boxster 6 speed (IMG:style_emoticons/default/devil.gif) But, my drivetrain runs too and the T4 will power it long after I return it to service. Look at Freds thread to get some idea of what you will probably be looking at. Freds car is a SE so it was worth saving (maybe!!). It is FUN to watch Fred fix it; I have called him a masochist in the thread. My background is Automotive Technician 40 years, and I restore old sports cars, mostly Japanese with a sprinkling of German. I have extensive engine/manual transmission building expertise. I have an Automotive AC specialist shop now and still wrench for my dinner... |
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