Mega Update
Project Unicorn has been slowly progressing as I find time with all the other projects-- here is an update on recent progress:
Wiring
After a careful examination of the existing harness, it was determined that a new harness would be put into the car. There was evidence of a major meltdown near the ameter, with a not-so-great vintage repair, and I just did not want to risk anything, nor chance down wiring issues when it was easy to get the proper solution. I contacted Curtis via 311s.org, and as usual, he built us a fantastic replacement harness which fit perfectly.
The original voltage regulator had a terminal shell that was looking pretty tired, so it was replaced with a new one from Vintage Connections:
Looks much better in the car now:
The original fuse box was also pretty tired, so a new one was sourced:
And I dug in my stash and added some correct original equipment Nissan fuses as well:
Gauges
The original 67.5 2000 gauges were rebuilt by Jon Frampton preserving the original mileage of the car. These were placed in a freshened up dash, with a new dash cover installed:
The knobs and switches were refreshed and repainted:
The under dash speaker was cleaned up and refurbished:
Other trim:
The license plate trim was reinstalled with new clips from
https://www.datsunrestorationproducts.com/ (JT68 on the forum):
Jim also provided us with a battery cable and tie down kit for the original group 24 battery-- that is one of the last pieces of the puzzle in the engine compartment.
In the engine compartment, more details to get this thing to completion:
A NOS kangaroo washer bag was finally sourced and installed:
And the stock 67.5 radiator was rebuilt with a new core, new braided hoses (and clamps) and reinstalled:
The carbs were finally installed (with their air box!) permanently last night, but before that could get done, I had to replace the old asbestos based heat insulation with some new adhesive backed heat reflector material:
First, make a pattern (blue painters tape works perfectly for this):
Transfer onto the adhesive backed material:
And install:
Hope you enjoyed this update-- more soon!
Michael