Whom would do business with this clown? The magistrate concluded that Mr Chelliah did not act honestly and that he did not honestly or reasonably believe that the seller was entitled to sell the car on behalf of the owner. The magistrate also highlighted the "objectively suspicious circumstances" surrounding the transaction and noted that Mr Chelliah was a "highly experienced individual in the purchasing and selling of classic cars". She said it could "not be readily accepted that a person of such experience would believe they were legitimately obtaining a car, supported by documents which were unconvincing".
Oh, just shoehorned a LS1 between the towers and re-stamped the block with the correct Lamborghini number
That poor car going through his hands. At least now it's in the hands of a motivated owner that's doesn't fit Chinese tyres.
Cranking this up at about 6AM for an 1140klm drive to Rolleston: Image Unavailable, Please Login Hopefully tapping out there on here then.
Worse. The good part, is that they're driven internally from a chain. The bad part, is that to change the pump, it's an engine out job. They can be kitted reasonably easily from underneath, however.
Bloody Hell. I guess there's reasons for that design, but sounds over engineered to a retired spanner man.
.............Or ............... This oil soaked hoses that you can't get to unless you have a hoist on a Saturday!
It looks quite nasty to replace,is there enough room up and down to fit or does the pump have to come off?
I can't recall exactly how I did it. I think you put a split in the hose to get it around the corner and feed it over, then clamp it below the split - and use lots of rubber grease. Kind of like spa night.