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Old 08-12-2020, 04:20 PM   #211 (permalink)
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: 1000 Islands, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 22,514

Blackfly - '98 Geo Metro
Team Metro
Last 3: 70.09 mpg (US)

MPGiata - '90 Mazda Miata
90 day: 52.71 mpg (US)

Even Fancier Metro - '14 Mitsubishi Mirage top spec
90 day: 70.75 mpg (US)

Appliance car - '14 Mitsubishi Mirage ES (base)
90 day: 52.48 mpg (US)
Thanks: 4,060
Thanked 6,959 Times in 3,603 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by M_a_t_t View Post
The trunk is pretty impressive for such a small car.

That trunk is also pretty rectangular for such a small car! Well, compared to modern ones anyway.

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Project MPGiata! Mods for getting 50+ MPG from a 1990 Miata
Honda mods: Ecomodding my $800 Honda Fit 5-speed beater
Mitsu mods: 70 MPG in my ecomodded, dirt cheap, 3-cylinder Mirage.
Ecodriving test: Manual vs. automatic transmission MPG showdown



EcoModder
has launched a forum for the efficient new Mitsubishi Mirage
www.MetroMPG.com - fuel efficiency info for Geo Metro owners
www.ForkenSwift.com - electric car conversion on a beer budget
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Old 08-12-2020, 04:25 PM   #212 (permalink)
Batman Junior
 
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: 1000 Islands, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 22,514

Blackfly - '98 Geo Metro
Team Metro
Last 3: 70.09 mpg (US)

MPGiata - '90 Mazda Miata
90 day: 52.71 mpg (US)

Even Fancier Metro - '14 Mitsubishi Mirage top spec
90 day: 70.75 mpg (US)

Appliance car - '14 Mitsubishi Mirage ES (base)
90 day: 52.48 mpg (US)
Thanks: 4,060
Thanked 6,959 Times in 3,603 Posts
bye Mirage, hi Miata

Today I parked the Mirage until winter.

It's MPGiata time!



I'm just heading out on a long-ish drive that'll give me a better chance to see how the freshly (slightly) lowered suspension feels & handles.
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Project MPGiata! Mods for getting 50+ MPG from a 1990 Miata
Honda mods: Ecomodding my $800 Honda Fit 5-speed beater
Mitsu mods: 70 MPG in my ecomodded, dirt cheap, 3-cylinder Mirage.
Ecodriving test: Manual vs. automatic transmission MPG showdown



EcoModder
has launched a forum for the efficient new Mitsubishi Mirage
www.MetroMPG.com - fuel efficiency info for Geo Metro owners
www.ForkenSwift.com - electric car conversion on a beer budget
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Old 08-12-2020, 05:52 PM   #213 (permalink)
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Evensville, TN
Posts: 676

Deep Blue - '94 GMC Suburban K2500 SLE
90 day: 23.75 mpg (US)

Griffin (T4R) - '99 Toyota 4Runner SR5
90 day: 25.43 mpg (US)
Thanks: 237
Thanked 580 Times in 322 Posts
Are your tires low profile, or are your wheel covers extended onto the tire?

Speaking of non low profile tires, mounted my set of 255/85R16 All Terrains on the 4Runner. Also finished my GPS Ram mount. Put a APP connector on my new puma 12v air compressor to plug in my existing APP setup and made up a short air hose to accompany it.
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Old 08-13-2020, 11:14 AM   #214 (permalink)
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Coastal Southern California
Posts: 6,299

Black and Green - '98 Honda Civic DX Coupe
Team Honda
90 day: 66.42 mpg (US)

Black and Red - '00 Nashbar Custom built eBike
90 day: 3671.43 mpg (US)
Thanks: 2,373
Thanked 2,172 Times in 1,469 Posts
MPGiata looks great. My own mods/repairs coming along, slowly. Electrical diagnosis done, I am indecisive about my repair plan: open the engine harness to replace wires, or cut faulty wires at each connector and run wire outside the harness bundle? I prefer the former. Car runs right now, so I have access when I need it.

Progress sounds great, aardvarcus. 16" wheels are kinda on the smaller side for a 4runner, no?
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See my car's mod & maintenance thread and my electric bicycle's thread for ongoing projects. I will rebuild Black and Green over decades as parts die, until it becomes a different car of roughly the same shape and color. My minimum fuel economy goal is 55 mpg while averaging posted speed limits. I generally top 60 mpg. See also my Honda manual transmission specs thread.



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Old 08-13-2020, 12:04 PM   #215 (permalink)
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Evensville, TN
Posts: 676

Deep Blue - '94 GMC Suburban K2500 SLE
90 day: 23.75 mpg (US)

Griffin (T4R) - '99 Toyota 4Runner SR5
90 day: 25.43 mpg (US)
Thanks: 237
Thanked 580 Times in 322 Posts
Ironically when I went to find my 3rd gen 4 runner my requirements were it had to be shipped from the factory with 15 inch wheels, because those came with 4.10 gears not 4.30s. So the 15s and 16s were a factory option in this year model (1999). The new ones all come with 17s or larger. The fifteens were long gone before I got ahold of it, so I swapped some Tacoma sixteens on it. I did the Tundra brake upgrade, so the 15s wouldn't fit now. Its sitting on "34" tires right now, so no shortage of rubber.
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Old 08-13-2020, 12:29 PM   #216 (permalink)
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Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: US
Posts: 1,015

Chief - '06 Pontiac Grand Prix
90 day: 26.7 mpg (US)

SF1 - '12 Ford Fiesta S
90 day: 30.95 mpg (US)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by California98Civic View Post
My own mods/repairs coming along, slowly. Electrical diagnosis done, I am indecisive about my repair plan: open the engine harness to replace wires, or cut faulty wires at each connector and run wire outside the harness bundle? I prefer the former. Car runs right now, so I have access when I need it.
As you may know all electrical testing assumes a good connection, check PJs carefully. In thirty plus year of electro/mechanical trouble shooting vary rarely was the problem in the harness per say but rather at points of movement and most times were the wire exits the harness or fastened in place. Old school was to pull a screwdriver using the blade along the insulation with tension on the wire and feel the break or just pull the wire and watch the insulation stretch. If your meter probes are needle type you can just stab them through the insulation and make tests at various points.
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MetroMPG (08-14-2020)
Old 08-13-2020, 04:00 PM   #217 (permalink)
Batman Junior
 
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: 1000 Islands, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 22,514

Blackfly - '98 Geo Metro
Team Metro
Last 3: 70.09 mpg (US)

MPGiata - '90 Mazda Miata
90 day: 52.71 mpg (US)

Even Fancier Metro - '14 Mitsubishi Mirage top spec
90 day: 70.75 mpg (US)

Appliance car - '14 Mitsubishi Mirage ES (base)
90 day: 52.48 mpg (US)
Thanks: 4,060
Thanked 6,959 Times in 3,603 Posts
Quote:
Originally Posted by aardvarcus View Post
Are your tires low profile, or are your wheel covers extended onto the tire?

65 aspect ratio on the front, 60 on the rear.


The discs touch the tires, but I need to trim the fronts because the discs are trimming the tire! Amazing how sharp coroplast can be...
__________________
Project MPGiata! Mods for getting 50+ MPG from a 1990 Miata
Honda mods: Ecomodding my $800 Honda Fit 5-speed beater
Mitsu mods: 70 MPG in my ecomodded, dirt cheap, 3-cylinder Mirage.
Ecodriving test: Manual vs. automatic transmission MPG showdown



EcoModder
has launched a forum for the efficient new Mitsubishi Mirage
www.MetroMPG.com - fuel efficiency info for Geo Metro owners
www.ForkenSwift.com - electric car conversion on a beer budget
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-13-2020, 10:34 PM   #218 (permalink)
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Evensville, TN
Posts: 676

Deep Blue - '94 GMC Suburban K2500 SLE
90 day: 23.75 mpg (US)

Griffin (T4R) - '99 Toyota 4Runner SR5
90 day: 25.43 mpg (US)
Thanks: 237
Thanked 580 Times in 322 Posts
Spent some time with my front bumper making a front belly pan/skid plate from the nose of the car back to the radiator where the main belly pan/ skid plates start. Bending 1/4 aluminum with a homemade press brake.
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Old 08-13-2020, 11:02 PM   #219 (permalink)
マット
 
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Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: Indiana
Posts: 718

The Van - '95 Chevy Astro Cl V8 Swapped
Team Chevy
90 day: 7.84 mpg (US)

The new bike - '17 Kawasaki Versys X 300 abs
Motorcycle
90 day: 71.94 mpg (US)

The Mercury - '95 Mercury Tracer Trio
Team Ford
90 day: 34.35 mpg (US)

Toyota - '22 Toyota Corolla Hatchback
90 day: 40.11 mpg (US)
Thanks: 131
Thanked 258 Times in 188 Posts
Is aluminum just as easy to work with in fetal forming as steel? I am having a hard time finding a local steel supplier that won't charge an arm and a leg for a sheet steel panel and as much as I'd like to get my panels from something else (recycle, scrap, etc.) I'm not sure it is going to be time effective. However, an ex- co worker keeps a supply of aluminum sheet for his race-car and has offered it to me before at a reasonable price. I have no sheet metal experience as of yet. I'm excited to start messing with it though.
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1975 Honda Civic CVCC 4spd
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1981 Kawasaki KZ650 CSR
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1986 Nissan 300zx Turbo 5 spd
1995 Chevy Astro RWD (current project)
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Old 08-14-2020, 07:58 AM   #220 (permalink)
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Evensville, TN
Posts: 676

Deep Blue - '94 GMC Suburban K2500 SLE
90 day: 23.75 mpg (US)

Griffin (T4R) - '99 Toyota 4Runner SR5
90 day: 25.43 mpg (US)
Thanks: 237
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My first attempt at belly panning a car many years ago was with 0.060 aluminum from a racecar friend's contact. Long story short I had few tools to work with the material and ended up dissatisfied.

It worked ok to cover short areas that were well supported, but large panels would vibrate and required bracing. Probably about the same effort to form as steel, except it is much cheaper to get into steel welding.

My 1/4 (which are recycled pieces) is thick enough to self span between supports, but requires serious tools to manipulate. And relatively heavy (but I need the strength).

Whatever material you choose, you will probably need a way to accurately cut it, bend it, and attach it together. Cardboard templates can be your best friends on a project like this, and with an angle guage you could theoretically make your piece from cardboard, trace it on metal, mark the bends with angle measurements, and take it somewhere to be bent or welded if you lack those capabilities. Rivets work with thiner metals.

Julian has some nice photos in his book where he first built frames for the pieces, and then skinned the frames. Which isn't a bad option either.

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