Oliver and Dudley made friends quickly. Ollie is a natural behind the wheel-- even at 17 months!
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Boot Snaps
Here is a picture of 1 of 2 convertible boot snaps I bought from Chuck's. For some reason, there were two missing--one from either side. Based on what I saw, it appeared they had been missing at least since the last paint job.
Friday, March 29, 2013
Antique Plates!
Seat Belt Struggle
A three day Easter weekend, so I decided to do some hard core Beetle work. Earlier this week I order $100 of parts from Chuck's Convertible Parts--lots of odds and ends for the interior.
The first undertaking was replacing the rear seat belts which looked like they had seen better days.
The first undertaking was replacing the rear seat belts which looked like they had seen better days.
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Old Seat Belt Set-up |
Old Seat Belt Seat-up Under Rear Seat |
Ugly Long-ass Bolt |
Turns out that this was much more difficult that I originally planned. I got the two female ends of the seat belts out no problem, but the same bolts that held those in also held the rear seat back. When I removed the bolts, the metal pieces on the seat backs that the bolts went through contracted. Long story short, I couldn't get the seat belts and rear seat to bolt back onto the car. I wound up going to Lowe's to get a longer bolt, but it totally looks like shit.
Oh well, I replaced everything, wiped the rear seat off, and put it back on. Everything looks nice, but knowing that wack bolt is under the seat bothers me. I have a topic on theSamba forum right now to get some help.
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New Rear Seatbelts! |
Monday, March 25, 2013
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Weekend Warrior
So this weekend the sun was out, and even though it was a little cold, I decided to do a little minor work on Dudley.
First I replaced 3 of the hubcaps as they had a bit of corrosion. I still had a few nice hubcaps left from my days with Bernie, so I shined them up and popped them on. They look nice on top of the beauty trim rings!
I also tried to work on the dome light, buzzer, and door switch. So far that has been a hideous disaster, but more on that later.
I also did battle with some West Coast Metric taillight seals I purchased on theSamba.com. There wer many challenges associated with this silly little job that I had done before. First, I had to figure out the best way to unbolt the tail light housing from the car. I couldn't find the right socket for the socket wrench, but after much trial and error, I got it.
Then I got beside the car and found that I couldn't get to the nuts from the side. I'd have to get under the car. This required me to jack the car up. Fine, I did that, got the car up, managed to get the taillight housing off, and then I mislabeled the colored wires. Ugh.
Then my battles began with the taillight seals. I hear WCM is quality, so I didn't get too bent out of shape when I found that the seals didn't fit the housing. I spent an entire evening getting those seals on, putting them in the dryer, pulling, stretching, massaging, only to find the next morning that they still weren't on well. Oops, I put the left seal on the right housing and so forth. Goddamnit! The next morning, this seals peeled right off.
I tried to stretch and lube the seals. Nope, that didn't work. Finally, Sarah suggested that I boil and stretch the seals. Good idea! That let me stretch the seals just enough to get them on the housing.
First I replaced 3 of the hubcaps as they had a bit of corrosion. I still had a few nice hubcaps left from my days with Bernie, so I shined them up and popped them on. They look nice on top of the beauty trim rings!
New and Old |
New and Old |
Old Tail Light Housing Seal |
Then I got beside the car and found that I couldn't get to the nuts from the side. I'd have to get under the car. This required me to jack the car up. Fine, I did that, got the car up, managed to get the taillight housing off, and then I mislabeled the colored wires. Ugh.
Then my battles began with the taillight seals. I hear WCM is quality, so I didn't get too bent out of shape when I found that the seals didn't fit the housing. I spent an entire evening getting those seals on, putting them in the dryer, pulling, stretching, massaging, only to find the next morning that they still weren't on well. Oops, I put the left seal on the right housing and so forth. Goddamnit! The next morning, this seals peeled right off.
I tried to stretch and lube the seals. Nope, that didn't work. Finally, Sarah suggested that I boil and stretch the seals. Good idea! That let me stretch the seals just enough to get them on the housing.
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Boiling the WCM Seals |
New Seal Mounted on Tail Light Housing--Done! |
Saturday, March 16, 2013
License to Plate
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My 3rd set of plates for Dudley. Dammit. |
Sunday, March 10, 2013
First Steps
Today Dudley and I had our first bonding session. Sarah went to Culpepper to have lunch with her friend Erica. It was a perfect Beetle day. I waited anxiously until she got home, and when she did, I ran outside to begin work on Dudley
The first project was to make use of the NOS Hella taillight lens that I never installed on Bernie. Dudley had a lens that was looking a bit rough, so I replaced it.



Finally, I got under the front trunk, pulled on of the fresh air hoses out (or the connector to the fan box) and replaced the turn signal bulb. It wasn't so hard, but it does appear that the bulb holder needs replacing.
Let the Buying Begin!
Today I made my first online purchase for Dudley via J. Bugs. They're jerks, but they sure do stock a lot of parts.
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Good luck, Charlie
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Fayetteville Brenda's Mean Green '76 Super Beetle |
Mean Green SB Engine. Damn, look at that shiny chrome! |
Of course, then I went to Wilmington and Newport News and looked at two clunkers. By the time I got home, I was ready to make an offer to crazy Brenda. We settled on $5,000--a steal! And I spent the rest of the weekend trying to set up a pick-up time. Nope, not Monday, she'd be out of town. Tuesday? Nope. Out of town. She said that it would just have to wait till the weekend. In the meantime, I got antsier. I emailed her again, asking about maybe Thursday or Friday. No answer. I waited. And waited. Still no answer. However, in the meantime, I went to Annapolis and looked at a really cool '67 convertible. Well, it looked cool in the pictures. A real 20-footer. In real life, it was a faded, red clunker with Porsche hub-caps. There was no Porsche in that car. My last trip was to Winchester, VA where I met Dudley...
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Wilmington, NC 1978 Fuel Injected VW Piece of Super Beetle |
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Annapolis The Red '67 20-footer |
Winchester Dudley, the 1971 Super Beetle Convertible |
Coming Home
Dudley drove incredibly well. The first thing I noticed about Dudley was his incredible fweem. Beautiful and music to my ears, particularly since Bernie never fweem-ed.
The second thing I noticed was how solid Dudley felt. No rattle, no shaking (maybe a little at 55mph). He handled very well, particularly around curves, and I appreciated the comfort of the Super Beetle. What they say about MacPherson struts versus torsion bar suspension is true.
Driving along, I also noticed the whistle Yuri told me about coming from the driver's side vent window. Not sure what to do about this. I might have to take Dudley to see Ken in the summer as I'm scared of fooling with rubber.
I'm thinking of rummaging through my parts box in the basement. I think I might have a glovebox door to donate to Dudley and maybe some other random parts. Fortunately, he's very complete and the parts are in excellent condition.
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