Another Aussie Chev - Patrick Ryan' 1925 Chev Tourer
I received an email today from Patrick in New South Wales with some great pictures of his new pride and joy, and the following is his story........so far
Here is a pic of my dad, and his dad, with the old farm 28 Chev (my dad always called it)
I have
recently purchased a 1925 Chev Superior K Touring.
The Chev was purchased
rom a local fellow, who has had it for over 20 years I understand, and
had it fully restored in 2000, but had only done 30 miles since, and was last
registered in 2004.
Apparently, I
am now the 3rd owner, as the current owner and restorer purchased it from the original
owners family. This is all
hearsay at the moment, so I am not sure what is true or not.
I am also a
Mechanical Engineer, worked my way up through, International trucks, then IVECO
trucks, moved to IVECO factory as a Regional Service Manager,
Then as
Regional Sales Manager. I then moved to Eaton Truck Components where I looked
after the Eaton Road Ranger product for over 5 years before I have ended up
here at Volvo Group, as Sales Support Manger for the UD brand.
All the while,
I have never stopped working at home, on cars (mainly kids love jobs) on
anything with an engine. Plus a range of 1950’s Victa’s.
I had a boat
that I sold after not using it for a couple of years, and thought I would buy
an old car to work on, preferably a WW2 Jeep.
A hot rodder
(I’m not interested in anything but originality myself Ray) mate of mine saw
this as it was uncovered after 10 years in the corner of the panel shop he
frequents, in Mascot.
The only
problem was it has not turned a wheel, or had been started since 2004
He said, forget
the Jeep, look at this!
I fell in love
immediately.
I will be
taking delivery of it next Saturday 27th September as the owner had an old mechanic go over it from top to bottom.
This included:
Removing the
head and fixing one seized valve
Draining and
replacing all oils and fluids.
Getting the
original Stewart warner vacuum fuel system up and working (working well now)
Complete tune
up and checks of the original 6V system
Checking every
nut and bolt
Removing the
L/H king pin as she wouldn’t accept grease and a bit of wet & dry and now
perfect.
After a good
drive, I reported the Moto Meter was showing a bit hot, and I discovered the
original honeycomb radiator was hot at the top and cool at the bottom.
I diagnosed a
potential blocked, or at least partially blocked radiator. This is being done
as we speak.
This has put
delivery back 1 week, but all for the best.
We had to
remove the original Alemite T type grease nipples, fit a BSP nipple, grease the
item then replace. (cant buy an Alemite T type coupling)
All good.
After doing a
lot of homework on this car, I can so far tell, she is 100% faithful in her
restoration, she still even has her original coil.
Here are some
other (poor iphone images) pics I have taken during my few visits to the
mechanic.
Strange key,
which I have no idea where it came from, nor does the owner.
Below is a
small video of the first start up since 2004, and having the head re fitted
Nice!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Grant.
ReplyDeleteI've been SO much enjoying reading yours and Rays exploits with Monty.
Its such an in depth record you guys have supplied to the world. I'm still reading after 2 days :-)
Very well done and you both looked like you had a ball.
Patrick