Congratulations on the book with no pics.. John really is a character.. together you guys are TV gold.. can’t wait to see it finished, great stuff guys 👍🏻
I completely stripped one of these engines down when i was 14 and my dad wasn't best pleased. However we did put it all back together with new bearings and such and it ran like a dream. These engines are so easy to work on.
With that color there isn’t much to make it look better. The only thing that would help that color would be maybe adding a metallic or pearl? @@Pits750
I am so glad you didn't quit. Last time it seemed you got bored of car youtubing. One or two chanels I liked to watch quietly left without telling. Or simply the time between their episodes lasts so long.
Yes we all agree. I think Rich should just play reruns of “best of” videos from the channels past for the weeks he’s not gonna post a new video. What do you think?
Rich’s voice is very soothing. His voice makes me regular again 💩 in the bathroom after every one of his videos. He has a voice of and ExLax- angel. 🤣😂🤣
RICH...Glad you kept the hydrolastic suspension, its superb. As its a Cooper it should have the uprated fluid units and you can see on the back that you have the uprated competition rubber bump stops (the big round rubber bumpers - on normal cars they were a little triangular thing) You need some of those larger rubber bump stops on the front to help stop dive, tho if you are using shocks as well it should be ok. The Discs on the front of your car (are from the 90's) and will only allow you to fit 12'' wheels....if you are throwing money at it get the Cooper 'S' 7'' discs..(servo tucked in passenger footwell so you don't have to take the brakes apart to mess with the engine) .and run 10'' wheels...Then and only then will you know why its wrong to run 12's... A well sorted car on 10'' wheels with a low diff is f*cking weapon and will out handle anything else you have ever driven...the tiny wheels will out accelerate many things and the low diff stops the engine drone at 60-70 mph and will carry your little box to 130mph ....get a well tucked cage too.. ;D
@@williamwilliams8145 Ho ho. There will always be a little bit of fuel for these retro special vehicles - like running traction engines at summer fetes. You'll have to order from some specialist website. Although I guess eventually running such a thing in public will need a pollution permit application :-)
I really hate these cars, my dad bought like 3 from auctions to find the cleaner ones, happens that they are all poorly built you can't find a "good one"
I had a Mini (1988) for 8 years and had the motor and gearbox completely rebuilt and upgraded to 1330 from a 998 with x pin diff and loads of top parts. Professionally built by Andy Davies of MLM Motorsport and AC Dodd with his trick cam and parts inside. That car was fast and reliable. I paid about 4k for the motor and gearbox build complete. Seems prices are much higher now.
Left hand threads are not only on early British but also American, take a look at anything from the 50's out of GM and left hand threaded wheel nuts can be found on one side of the car and right hand thread on the other
I believe it was a thing in the US earlier than that. Left hand thread wheel studs were used on one side on WW2 Ford & Wilys Jeeps as well as I recollect?
My grandpa has always been a car guy and recently he sold his z4 for a mini Cooper. It was a real head scratcher for me at first but they’re really starting to grow on me. I love the houndstooth seats, those are going to look amazing with the brown leather/suede and with all the drivetrain and suspension upgrades that car is going to feel like a rocket sled on rails. I’m very excited to see more of this project (and the others). Great job Rich! Keep up the good work!
Oh god not the turbo kit from Jet motors and a aluminum radiator. Rich I know these may seem like upgrades but I highly recommend you speak with the folks at Wild Child Classic Cars in Arizona. I’ve made the these same mistakes with my A series mini and all my car did was overheat and didn’t really make anymore power. They educated me on the correct way to build my car, supercharging is the way to go. They are also experts in that hydrolastic system and have the best prices on mini parts state side.
Hello mate hear in the uk we had a car called a mg metro turbo which has a 1275 a series turbo engine as standard (I have 2) you could have sourced an original engine turbo and loom and the parts to rebuild one for a fraction of the price I always love all your videos keep spending all you're money to keep us entertained lol
Definitely paid too much, unless it has some REALLY expensive parts inside. I would have contacted someone like MED or KAD, I bet for 18k he could have had a race engine or high output turbo motor built using top quality parts including shipping. I suppose it's a bit of a specialist thing over the pond, probably why it was so expensive.
Loving this build. Thanks for taking your time with the videos and putting them out when ya want. I can tell you enjoy making the videos a lot more that way. Thanks for all the laughs and useful information you bring to all your videos. Been having a rough last couple last months searching for houses and videos like this really help!! Thanks Rich for all you and your team do to bring us these videos.
I'm surprized you didn't just drop the subframes, far easier to sort the engine out that way, and check for rust where the subframes bolt on, here in the uk the rot very quickly due to the salt they put on the roads. It's nice to see a mini being restored, I had a normal mini and a mini pick up, years ago lol
Awesome all the new suspension parts there, well done throwing lots of new stuff into this, rather than bodging it. Edit: $18K for the engine!!! And that is US$ ouch. My brother did a Morris mini deluxe up in the late 80s in Australia (non Cooper/s of course, he may have sunk a few Coopers down while restoring it mind you) and parts were dirt cheap back then!
Damn, your putting the rebuild in richrebuilds on this one. This is some serious work from what I can tell. Would be curious to see more of the engine build since this is such an old car. Keep up the good work
Your gonna need a engine steady bolted from the thermostat mount on the head, to the bulk head. I made this mistake of relying on the standard bone one, Once the power does the bushes and the engine rocks youll snap the carb off the inlet manifold. Save time and money, do it now.
That Mini is going to be a great car, just make the paint two toned, like white pearl on top and metallic wine red bottom (or British flag theme). With all the horses in the stable, it should turn some heads. Thumbs up for the team! 👍 You're making a good job.
The Hydroelastic suspension is junk for a performance Mini, you need hi-lo cones and rubber to get the best handling. Enjoying the build...you are doing it in a very British way. Blacked out engine bay etc...I learnt to mechanic from my Dad on Mini's and that reversed thread was one thing i do remember! Maybe a Chocolate roof would give it the real Mini Cooper vibe?
Nah, it's pretty disappointing to think that Rich seems to have fired him and then lied about it repeatedly. I have to admit, it's certainly dampened my enthusiasm for this channel. Maybe there's something about it in his tell-all memoir.
Congratulations on your book. To me your best videos were your original Tesla rebuild. I found your channel during the middle of it and they was fascinating to watch. Against all odds, with trial and error and no support from Elon and Tesla, you made that car run again. It was epic. Your perseverance was truly impressive. I don't know if you will ever top that rebuild. The ICE-T build and some of your other videos are interesting and entertaining, but not as compelling.
this was all done in the 80's mg metro turbo engine bolted in with a weld in box in the firewall where the turbo sits and dump the whole rear suspention for a beam axle with coil overs
The nuts are opposite threads for the same reason a British bottom bracket is on a bicycle. If the threads are the same way both sides then the rotation of the wheel will cause the near side nut to work loose. By having them opposite threads then the rotation of the wheel makes the nut actually get tighter
I'm impressed. Rich is actually doing a solid restoration on a car for a change, instead of putting a diesel engine in it, or turning it into a rat rod or something. But I do get why he did a dodgy EV conversion on his new(er) Mini, those things are way less collectible than the original Mini Coopers. I still remember as a kid in NZ over 40 years ago when those Minis were still brand new. It's amazing that people are still valuing them. Is that engine from a newer car, like a Metro or something? It certainly doesn't look like the old A-series that the original cars had.
Reminds me I need to order parts and sort out my passenger front brake caliper on my '74 Mk3. Not really diggin' the grey, but you do you Uncle Rich, however that chocolate interior is very schmoove. Props to John.
Oh nice 👍🏾, can’t wait to hear those turbo noises, will it also make pops and crackle sounds. Hopefully it shoots flames 🔥 out the tail pipe. You should get the front and rear lights to do a sequence on start up.
You definitely need a larger carburettor. I used to have a Dellorto 45 on mine, I had to cut in a battery box from the boot into the dash to make space for it though
Ha ha - I like it when Rich says about '$10,000 then?' knowing full-well that a full set of bearing shells for main bearings and big-end bearing for a mini is about £100 ($120?). This is why we keep coming back :-)
If that's the stock rad fan on there, its backwards. Still blows air the right way like that, but not as much and can cause overheating issues. Very common problem
Doing a great job on the real Mini big respect, all the Mini owners I have known over the years have made each their own. Some have put in engines out of an old Austin Maxi 1750cc others have used engines out of other Mini's like replacing an 850cc with a 1275cc but the interior's we won't go there.
@@cambridgemart2075 That is true I love the old Mini and worked on quite a few but now they are far out of my price range or they need so much welding it would be cheaper to buy a new body.
@@mclarenjohnf1 A very old friend has her husband's old 1959 mini in a garage where it has been for 35 years now,; we have tried to persuade her to put it up for auction as it's probably worth a small fortune, but she won't part with it.
@@cambridgemart2075 I know people like that my uncle has 2 motorbikes in his old garage that I remember sitting on and stuff when I was 7 so that would be about 1972 and he would rather give you his left arm than sell those yet he purchased a Chinese version of a Honda 250 super dream not long ago.
If the setup is a blow through carburettor system, the dashpot needs a clamp on the cap; MG Metro turbos had the clamp fitted when they discovered the top cap could be ejected under boost.
When they make rods, they are forged, a single piece. The they machine that single piece out for the crank bore, then the top of the crank for the piston pin and then drilling and tapping for the caps. Once they have completed all of that, The crank is cracked in half. That cracked surface gives a perfect profile when putting it back together but it only goes on one way. Then inside each side of that crack they either machine or compress the metal for the bearing relief locks.That's why you have to keep the crank orientation to its cap because one cap might go on another crankshaft but it won't line up on that forge crack. Likewise if you flip it around and it's on the same crankshaft the forge crack won't mate up. They only go together one way and that's why.
That is the case with a lot of modern rods but it wasn't the case back when the Mini was manufactured. According to Google Ford was the first to utilize fractured rods starting in 1990.
ye... the gap between those cylindars is basically brown paper bag level, you turbo that for any length of time and your 4 piston will have more in common with a 2 stroke, you should hot up something like a toyota R series from 70s, the blocks on those are stupidly thicc and thick too
That turbo is large for the engine capacity. Plenty of lag should be expected. The one that i used on my Mini was from a 1000 cc. Diahatsu charade, along with the carburettor which had a boost controlled secondary choke. The turbo, an IHI, was about 1/3 the size and worked perfectly mounted on the original exhaust manifold behind the engine with a tiny ex Suzuki intercooler . To lower the compression ratio, I made a 3 mm copper head gasket, and included water injection, also boost controlled. The rest of the car had Mk 1 Volkswagen GTI disc brakes with a booster from a Nissan Micra, BMW 12" wheels with 175/50 12 tires. The whole project cost me less than $1000, including the car. It was sold to a Mini fanatic for $15k because it blew the doors of his $20K race Mini Cooper S. The doner car was a basic 1981 1000, not a Cooper.
It’s definitely cool. I’m a little surprised that with the new turbo go kart engine you didn’t upgrade the brakes at all but I also don’t know much about the originals
From the looks of that oil, are u sure they weren't running something like Wolf's head oil? Basically an asphalt based oil? That's kinda what it looks like to me. Years ago I bought a 1985 mustang GT that had an oil pressure issue, it didn't have any! And when I took the engine apart, I found pretty much a blacktop driveway I. The engine! It was caked in the oil pump pick up, the oil pump...everywhere! I rebuilt it and it ran awesome, but I had to soak every part I was saving in mineral spirits for days to get the blacktop out of my engine
If u think about it, rotation of the driver side with the vehicle going forward will loosen a nut while passenger side tightens. Guess thts what they were thinking with the left hand thread.
I love the build and the interior colors mostly! I have to say, would an engine swap from the beginning have been cheaper and more powerful? I'm curious to see the suspension in action and how that works out.
Yep mini parts have gone nuts in price these last few years. Hope you've replaced all the subframe mounts. Hope you had the gearbox updated including the drop gears, especially the bearing for the middle one and the differential. If you head north of 100bhp, the diff tends to eat itself. Hydrolastic can be very good when working, when not it's a nightmare, the units haven't been built for over 50yrs, and they can only be rebuilt, guessing US cost would be around $2000/corner. Good luck Rich, hoping to see this finished.
C'mon my friends. Have none of you ever worked on a bicycle? Forward tighty on the right side and forward tighty on the left, thus "Left hand thread." That way nothing comes loose in normal use.
That grey color looks a lot like Rust-oleum Ash Grey spray paint. Was going to buy some packs of that recently off of Amazon but that specific color is for some reason more expensive than any other color.
suspension for race rallye setups dual acting shocks front and back shorten the ubes between the belows by 1/4 Inch pump the hydrolastic up higher presure to stop the sesaw action on acceleration and de acceleration, there are plastic cups that a ball rides in on the swing Arms will need replacement, negative and positive camber can be achieved on the rear by the outer support plates on the rear swing armes, which will need to be removed to fixe the plastic cup and ball,
Congratulations on the book with no pics.. John really is a character.. together you guys are TV gold.. can’t wait to see it finished, great stuff guys 👍🏻
John is a top tier character. Very underrated
John is a Great guy to meet. Very well rounded in knowledge of all aspects of cars n trucks. Not just interiors.
And yet he's living and working out of a storage unit these days. Maybe Rich should increase his wages.
Why have a shop when you can just use friends shops like Rich’s? John is doing very well working at EG Garage. @@Satanist-zm2rq
he did a great job in shrek 2 as well as the ugly stepsister
Agreed.
I completely stripped one of these engines down when i was 14 and my dad wasn't best pleased. However we did put it all back together with new bearings and such and it ran like a dream. These engines are so easy to work on.
Should be done in time for SEMA! Big props to John. Dude really knows his craft.
John is great at what he does and an amazing nice guy to meet. 👍
SEMA which year?
Year of the Uncle Rich. LoL @@Satanist-zm2rq
Sema? Have you seen the paint? It's complete arse.
With that color there isn’t much to make it look better. The only thing that would help that color would be maybe adding a metallic or pearl? @@Pits750
I am so glad you didn't quit. Last time it seemed you got bored of car youtubing. One or two chanels I liked to watch quietly left without telling. Or simply the time between their episodes lasts so long.
Yes we all agree. I think Rich should just play reruns of “best of” videos from the channels past for the weeks he’s not gonna post a new video. What do you think?
I'm glad he doesn't do videos all the time. you don't want to be content driven. then you're not having fun anymore👍🏼😎🇨🇦
Glad you wrote a book and especially glad that you are going to be releasing the audio with your own voice. Me and my wife love your voice.
Rich’s voice is very soothing. His voice makes me regular again 💩 in the bathroom after every one of his videos. He has a voice of and ExLax- angel. 🤣😂🤣
The interior is going to be 🔥!!! Can’t wait to see it finished.
So a Bisquit 🐕 brown interior????
Oh yea I cannot wait to see this interior. So happy brown's. It's going to be just an OG cool
RICH...Glad you kept the hydrolastic suspension, its superb. As its a Cooper it should have the uprated fluid units and you can see on the back that you have the uprated competition rubber bump stops (the big round rubber bumpers - on normal cars they were a little triangular thing) You need some of those larger rubber bump stops on the front to help stop dive, tho if you are using shocks as well it should be ok.
The Discs on the front of your car (are from the 90's) and will only allow you to fit 12'' wheels....if you are throwing money at it get the Cooper 'S' 7'' discs..(servo tucked in passenger footwell so you don't have to take the brakes apart to mess with the engine) .and run 10'' wheels...Then and only then will you know why its wrong to run 12's...
A well sorted car on 10'' wheels with a low diff is f*cking weapon and will out handle anything else you have ever driven...the tiny wheels will out accelerate many things and the low diff stops the engine drone at 60-70 mph and will carry your little box to 130mph ....get a well tucked cage too.. ;D
It would be cool to see more of the build details, like building the engine. Looking good!
Maybe Rich could make a second channel on more details of builds????
I like John's new shop the most
I see it as cheaper lower over head for him to give all his customers lower better prices 💵 than others.
ASMR of John making that interior? Sewing machine ticking away would be noice to watch.
They just told you the man lost his shop man he’s probably doing it from his house
The best interior jobs I had done were guys working out of their house not a shop. @@shabbabaptiste36
Very nice project, i enjoy watching this a lot. Pleas show EVERYTHING.
"I think we may have gone overboard a little bit." Literally every one of Rich's awesome builds. 18:10
Watching two grown men get excited about fabric is hilarious. That interior is going to be awesome! Thanks for sharing with us Rich.
Oh that Project Binky rip at 0:50. One day... one day it will be completed.
Binky is the best project on YT ❤
Hopefully it will be finished before fossil fuels run out.
@@williamwilliams8145 Ho ho. There will always be a little bit of fuel for these retro special vehicles - like running traction engines at summer fetes. You'll have to order from some specialist website. Although I guess eventually running such a thing in public will need a pollution permit application :-)
This is a great build and I love how much work and change is reflected in this one video. SO much better than 10 episodes with small accomplishments.
Whoever is watching this video, I hope this day will be a great day.😇
What was it painted with ? An electric fence sprayer from Walmart?
Love the fact you kept the A series
Amazing the painter was able to recreate the nice 60's Orange peel effect witht the paint job! Looks realllll good 😂🙈
I really hate these cars, my dad bought like 3 from auctions to find the cleaner ones, happens that they are all poorly built you can't find a "good one"
Nice I can’t wait to hear and see it completed. Makes me think of an old 007 movie.
Yes it’s secret agent “Rich, Uncle Rich”. LoL
I really enjoy your videos now, focused and no BS! 👍
Gonna love seeing another classic mini on the road soon in NH
I had a Mini (1988) for 8 years and had the motor and gearbox completely rebuilt and upgraded to 1330 from a 998 with x pin diff and loads of top parts. Professionally built by Andy Davies of MLM Motorsport and AC Dodd with his trick cam and parts inside. That car was fast and reliable. I paid about 4k for the motor and gearbox build complete. Seems prices are much higher now.
That's about $15k worth of parts and labor right now.
Awesome video, Rich! Good to see Chad, Josh does an excellent job with the interior. Can't wait for the next video.
Left hand threads are not only on early British but also American, take a look at anything from the 50's out of GM and left hand threaded wheel nuts can be found on one side of the car and right hand thread on the other
Mopar also did it. Just found out on a 1965 Dodge dart
Ford F250/350 10.25"/10.5" rear hub bearing locknuts are still left and right hand threaded.
I believe it was a thing in the US earlier than that. Left hand thread wheel studs were used on one side on WW2 Ford & Wilys Jeeps as well as I recollect?
My grandpa has always been a car guy and recently he sold his z4 for a mini Cooper. It was a real head scratcher for me at first but they’re really starting to grow on me. I love the houndstooth seats, those are going to look amazing with the brown leather/suede and with all the drivetrain and suspension upgrades that car is going to feel like a rocket sled on rails. I’m very excited to see more of this project (and the others). Great job Rich! Keep up the good work!
Hey Rich, happy book history month. Congrats to you and you and your writer.
Oh god not the turbo kit from Jet motors and a aluminum radiator. Rich I know these may seem like upgrades but I highly recommend you speak with the folks at Wild Child Classic Cars in Arizona. I’ve made the these same mistakes with my A series mini and all my car did was overheat and didn’t really make anymore power. They educated me on the correct way to build my car, supercharging is the way to go. They are also experts in that hydrolastic system and have the best prices on mini parts state side.
So sad to get this after buying stuff.
The MG Metro Turbo had basically the same engine, although with slightly larger combustion chamber volume.
Hello mate hear in the uk we had a car called a mg metro turbo which has a 1275 a series turbo engine as standard (I have 2) you could have sourced an original engine turbo and loom and the parts to rebuild one for a fraction of the price
I always love all your videos keep spending all you're money to keep us entertained lol
Definitely paid too much, unless it has some REALLY expensive parts inside. I would have contacted someone like MED or KAD, I bet for 18k he could have had a race engine or high output turbo motor built using top quality parts including shipping.
I suppose it's a bit of a specialist thing over the pond, probably why it was so expensive.
Can order a full engine 1380cc kit for about £5000. If you go Metro Turbo I believe the bulkhead needs modification
Your voice for the audio is perfect. We love it for the podcasts so it will work there, too.
Loving this build. Thanks for taking your time with the videos and putting them out when ya want. I can tell you enjoy making the videos a lot more that way. Thanks for all the laughs and useful information you bring to all your videos. Been having a rough last couple last months searching for houses and videos like this really help!! Thanks Rich for all you and your team do to bring us these videos.
In the uk now we do a lot of Honda K20 swaps,300-400bhp in these minis are scary but fun 😎
Dual motor electric swap is going to be a revolution. We are *this* close to having the battery tech to make it wicked.
a lot of the swaps are not honda k series but bmw k series
I'm surprized you didn't just drop the subframes, far easier to sort the engine out that way, and check for rust where the subframes bolt on, here in the uk the rot very quickly due to the salt they put on the roads.
It's nice to see a mini being restored, I had a normal mini and a mini pick up, years ago lol
Coming together great! Great interior ideas too!
Awesome all the new suspension parts there, well done throwing lots of new stuff into this, rather than bodging it.
Edit: $18K for the engine!!! And that is US$ ouch. My brother did a Morris mini deluxe up in the late 80s in Australia (non Cooper/s of course, he may have sunk a few Coopers down while restoring it mind you) and parts were dirt cheap back then!
I feel as if he could have swapped a turbo K or d series honda in there and made twice the power for that money
Man Rich is so nice to buy surplus navy paint
Maybe Uncle Rich is a fan of seaman. LoL
But not Navy blue 😒
@@JeffKopis More of the "Kreig" (Warhammer40k) vibe
Really looking forward to seeing this Mini all done. :)
Looking forward to this, built a few A Series with my dad in my younger days. Go as big as you can with the intercooler Rich.👍🏻
I heard somewhere that if you put a 400cid crank in that Mini motor, it'll bump the displacement up to 383!!! 😃
Awesome and outstanding as always
THIS is the content I love.
Damn, your putting the rebuild in richrebuilds on this one. This is some serious work from what I can tell. Would be curious to see more of the engine build since this is such an old car.
Keep up the good work
Your gonna need a engine steady bolted from the thermostat mount on the head, to the bulk head. I made this mistake of relying on the standard bone one, Once the power does the bushes and the engine rocks youll snap the carb off the inlet manifold. Save time and money, do it now.
That Mini is going to be a great car, just make the paint two toned, like white pearl on top and metallic wine red bottom (or British flag theme). With all the horses in the stable, it should turn some heads. Thumbs up for the team! 👍 You're making a good job.
Nice shirt john! I worked at autosound years ago too. Used to do 12volt and sunroof back in the day
Jeremy from Jet is the best! I've been flying RC helis with him for 20 years!
Hey Rich , American cars in the ‘50’s had left side reverse threads on wheel lugs, but not castle nuts.
I don't care what Tavarish says you're one of the best car guys looking forward to the next video always
Rich really isn't very tall.
His talent for making great content put him high above the rest 😉
No but he is a great guy with a big heart.
I'm sure he has a great personality.
he would’ve been too much of a problem and perfection
he has a big pp tho
Uncle Rich, have you considered putting the union jack on the roof of the mini out of matte and gloss vinyl? you could retain the grey colour that way
The Hydroelastic suspension is junk for a performance Mini, you need hi-lo cones and rubber to get the best handling. Enjoying the build...you are doing it in a very British way. Blacked out engine bay etc...I learnt to mechanic from my Dad on Mini's and that reversed thread was one thing i do remember! Maybe a Chocolate roof would give it the real Mini Cooper vibe?
Hm, no Stevon tabs/hints this week...
Nah, it's pretty disappointing to think that Rich seems to have fired him and then lied about it repeatedly. I have to admit, it's certainly dampened my enthusiasm for this channel. Maybe there's something about it in his tell-all memoir.
Congratulations on your book. To me your best videos were your original Tesla rebuild. I found your channel during the middle of it and they was fascinating to watch. Against all odds, with trial and error and no support from Elon and Tesla, you made that car run again. It was epic. Your perseverance was truly impressive. I don't know if you will ever top that rebuild. The ICE-T build and some of your other videos are interesting and entertaining, but not as compelling.
Looking forward to seeing it drive. Should be impressive with that engine and turbo.
this was all done in the 80's mg metro turbo engine bolted in with a weld in box in the firewall where the turbo sits and dump the whole rear suspention for a beam axle with coil overs
How's stevon doing? It's weird not seeing him in the videos.
He has a channel called Box Eclectic. He's been uploading some home improvement videos while he's on house arrest.
@@TheInsaneSheckladorwhy is he on house arrest?
@@MrParkourchannel The car crash he had here on Rich's channel.
The nuts are opposite threads for the same reason a British bottom bracket is on a bicycle. If the threads are the same way both sides then the rotation of the wheel will cause the near side nut to work loose. By having them opposite threads then the rotation of the wheel makes the nut actually get tighter
so beautiful. really great to see you do a build with tasteful upgrades!
Reverse threads on right side of vehicle used to be quite common, lorry and bus wheelnuts too.
I'm impressed. Rich is actually doing a solid restoration on a car for a change, instead of putting a diesel engine in it, or turning it into a rat rod or something. But I do get why he did a dodgy EV conversion on his new(er) Mini, those things are way less collectible than the original Mini Coopers. I still remember as a kid in NZ over 40 years ago when those Minis were still brand new. It's amazing that people are still valuing them. Is that engine from a newer car, like a Metro or something? It certainly doesn't look like the old A-series that the original cars had.
Reminds me I need to order parts and sort out my passenger front brake caliper on my '74 Mk3. Not really diggin' the grey, but you do you Uncle Rich, however that chocolate interior is very schmoove. Props to John.
Wheres Steven been??
made a channel called box eclectic
excited for the audiobook!
What about the people that can’t hear or read??
I’m just gonna wait for the movie version. LoL 😂
Oh nice 👍🏾, can’t wait to hear those turbo noises, will it also make pops and crackle sounds. Hopefully it shoots flames 🔥 out the tail pipe.
You should get the front and rear lights to do a sequence on start up.
You definitely need a larger carburettor. I used to have a Dellorto 45 on mine, I had to cut in a battery box from the boot into the dash to make space for it though
this would have been a great hayabusa swap.
they are too large actually. the yamaha r1 is a far better swap as you dont need to do any flip front stuff or bonnet sticky out bits.
@@mrrolandlawrence I think the 'busa normally goes in the back
Ha ha - I like it when Rich says about '$10,000 then?' knowing full-well that a full set of bearing shells for main bearings and big-end bearing for a mini is about £100 ($120?). This is why we keep coming back :-)
Good job Richard houndstooth interesting
I wrote a book once it was a great success. All the other kids in the class loved my drawings
If that's the stock rad fan on there, its backwards. Still blows air the right way like that, but not as much and can cause overheating issues. Very common problem
So, how's Steven doing???
Doing a great job on the real Mini big respect, all the Mini owners I have known over the years have made each their own. Some have put in engines out of an old Austin Maxi 1750cc others have used engines out of other Mini's like replacing an 850cc with a 1275cc but the interior's we won't go there.
Many people reckon you can get more power from an overbored A series than from the 1750cc E series engine.
@@cambridgemart2075 That is true I love the old Mini and worked on quite a few but now they are far out of my price range or they need so much welding it would be cheaper to buy a new body.
@@mclarenjohnf1 A very old friend has her husband's old 1959 mini in a garage where it has been for 35 years now,; we have tried to persuade her to put it up for auction as it's probably worth a small fortune, but she won't part with it.
@@cambridgemart2075 I know people like that my uncle has 2 motorbikes in his old garage that I remember sitting on and stuff when I was 7 so that would be about 1972 and he would rather give you his left arm than sell those yet he purchased a Chinese version of a Honda 250 super dream not long ago.
Good build. Usually you guys fix junk up and afterwards it's still junk (except for the ICE Tesla). I like this build. Thanks for sharing.
Awesome build guys, Sir Mini Coop is gonna be a firecracker
Lol, Classic Mopar cars used Left hand and Right hand rotation lug nuts too. It’s not just a british thing.
Where is Stevon?
I am watching this in March like a BOSS 👌💪
If the setup is a blow through carburettor system, the dashpot needs a clamp on the cap; MG Metro turbos had the clamp fitted when they discovered the top cap could be ejected under boost.
When they make rods, they are forged, a single piece. The they machine that single piece out for the crank bore, then the top of the crank for the piston pin and then drilling and tapping for the caps. Once they have completed all of that, The crank is cracked in half. That cracked surface gives a perfect profile when putting it back together but it only goes on one way. Then inside each side of that crack they either machine or compress the metal for the bearing relief locks.That's why you have to keep the crank orientation to its cap because one cap might go on another crankshaft but it won't line up on that forge crack. Likewise if you flip it around and it's on the same crankshaft the forge crack won't mate up. They only go together one way and that's why.
That is the case with a lot of modern rods but it wasn't the case back when the Mini was manufactured. According to Google Ford was the first to utilize fractured rods starting in 1990.
ye... the gap between those cylindars is basically brown paper bag level, you turbo that for any length of time and your 4 piston will have more in common with a 2 stroke, you should hot up something like a toyota R series from 70s, the blocks on those are stupidly thicc and thick too
John your work is awesome your a great addition to the channel
That is a very sexy build this far, look forward to see it running when it is done.
That turbo is large for the engine capacity. Plenty of lag should be expected. The one that i used on my Mini was from a 1000 cc. Diahatsu charade, along with the carburettor which had a boost controlled secondary choke. The turbo, an IHI, was about 1/3 the size and worked perfectly mounted on the original exhaust manifold behind the engine with a tiny ex Suzuki intercooler . To lower the compression ratio, I made a 3 mm copper head gasket, and included water injection, also boost controlled.
The rest of the car had Mk 1 Volkswagen GTI disc brakes with a booster from a Nissan Micra, BMW 12" wheels with 175/50 12 tires. The whole project cost me less than $1000, including the car. It was sold to a Mini fanatic for $15k because it blew the doors of his $20K race Mini Cooper S. The doner car was a basic 1981 1000, not a Cooper.
What happened to Stevon?
It’s definitely cool. I’m a little surprised that with the new turbo go kart engine you didn’t upgrade the brakes at all but I also don’t know much about the originals
From the looks of that oil, are u sure they weren't running something like Wolf's head oil? Basically an asphalt based oil? That's kinda what it looks like to me.
Years ago I bought a 1985 mustang GT that had an oil pressure issue, it didn't have any! And when I took the engine apart, I found pretty much a blacktop driveway I. The engine! It was caked in the oil pump pick up, the oil pump...everywhere!
I rebuilt it and it ran awesome, but I had to soak every part I was saving in mineral spirits for days to get the blacktop out of my engine
Man Chad really knows his stuff. Super cool.
If u think about it, rotation of the driver side with the vehicle going forward will loosen a nut while passenger side tightens. Guess thts what they were thinking with the left hand thread.
Rich is that paint color Grey or Gray? I’m confused 🤷
Primer is grey
Is it Primer or Primmer then?@@miguelcorleone2788
You could buy an A-series ‘ERA turbo Mini’ and metro turbo in the UK. Garrett T5 works well
I love the build and the interior colors mostly! I have to say, would an engine swap from the beginning have been cheaper and more powerful? I'm curious to see the suspension in action and how that works out.
Yep mini parts have gone nuts in price these last few years.
Hope you've replaced all the subframe mounts.
Hope you had the gearbox updated including the drop gears, especially the bearing for the middle one and the differential. If you head north of 100bhp, the diff tends to eat itself.
Hydrolastic can be very good when working, when not it's a nightmare, the units haven't been built for over 50yrs, and they can only be rebuilt, guessing US cost would be around $2000/corner.
Good luck Rich, hoping to see this finished.
Alex Moulton designed the suspension on classic Mini. The same type of suspension was utilised on the bicycles branded with his name.
C'mon my friends. Have none of you ever worked on a bicycle? Forward tighty on the right side and forward tighty on the left, thus "Left hand thread." That way nothing comes loose in normal use.
That grey color looks a lot like Rust-oleum Ash Grey spray paint. Was going to buy some packs of that recently off of Amazon but that specific color is for some reason more expensive than any other color.
suspension for race rallye setups dual acting shocks front and back
shorten the ubes between the belows by 1/4 Inch pump the hydrolastic up higher presure to stop the sesaw action on acceleration and de acceleration, there are plastic cups that a ball rides in on the swing Arms will need replacement,
negative and positive camber can be achieved on the rear by the outer support plates on the rear swing armes, which will need to be removed to fixe the plastic cup and ball,
Porsche 911 gt3rs with centerlock wheels also uses reverse thread on one side. Nice porsche build!
The greys good, but mk1 rear lights and front grill improve the look of these massively
Stevon has been posting on channel
Box Eclectic
Hopefully now people will stop complaining in the comments lol
@@shawnsanchez7105never!
We can only hope they do. @@shawnsanchez7105
You would think the channels name was Rich n SteVon Rebuilds the way these SteVon fans don’t stop . Very annoying! @@shawnsanchez7105