The Phoenix - The GP Roadster Project

Discussion in 'Car Builds, Projects, Idea's Experiments' started by BlimeyCabrio, Jun 24, 2014.

  1. BlimeyCabrio

    BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIs
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  2. Green Flash

    Green Flash Member

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    Convertibles in the Rain

    The tonneau cover you constructed really added to appearance and practicality. Well done.

    Owned an MGB for many years, one that had a factory tonneau cover. It was set up to cover the entire cockpit, or all but the driver's side, or open over both seats and cover the back portion. It was a true roadster with the top fabric having to be removed, folded and put in the trunk, then remove the frame, pull apart in two sections, fold and put in the trunk. For 7 years, I drove the car with the top in the trunk, only using the tonneau. When parked and a rain shower came by, it kept the inside quite dry. When driving in the rain, it was also quite dry as long as the speed was over 40 mph. Stoplights would make things a bit wet.

    You need to consider extending your tonneau design to also cover the seating area. In addition to rain protection, I found the tonneau beneficial to keep the summer sun off the seats when parked so my bum was not burned when first sitting in the car (Florida sun can make black leather scorching).
     
  3. BlimeyCabrio

    BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIs
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    Great story, thanks!

    I've thought about that, but for now will stick with the current setup. I have a cover I'll carry and use when needed in the rain. I'll also carry the bikini top, when done, and will be able to put it on and off in a minute or two. The car should stay relatively dry with it on, they way I've designed it.
     
  4. Mini7

    Mini7 New Member

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    When I first fitted my ASTs I also found the RHS came out 1/2" higher when I set the coil overs statically while off the car. Weird.


    Paul, VIR is nice and smooth after being repaved in 2013/2014. But I would steer clear of the curbing with the splitter. I normally straight line the lower snake by riding the curbs. Unless you tell me different after next weekend. Looks like I will be driving a curbless line after I fit my splitter.

    Did the temp strips arrive?
     
  5. cct1

    cct1 Well-Known Member
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    Depends on how stiff your springs are. I never hit the splitter on curbing, and I was even lower than Paul.
     
  6. BlimeyCabrio

    BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIs
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    Yep, I have the temp strips - thanks!

    The splitter only overhangs the front edge of the bumper by 2" at the corner, and only goes .5" lower. You'd have to hit a seriously aggressive curb straight on for it to bottom, even with only a couple of inches of ground clearance. At the approach angle you'll usually be riding the curbing at, it shouldn't be an issue.
     
  7. Mini7

    Mini7 New Member

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    Chris, I have 450lbs springs front and rear. So I should be good to go.
     
  8. cct1

    cct1 Well-Known Member
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    You'll be fine with those.
     
  9. BlimeyCabrio

    BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIs
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    #1329 BlimeyCabrio, Feb 24, 2016
    Last edited: Feb 24, 2016
    Rainy week here, but should be nice at VIR this weekend. Getting ready to hit the road Friday.

    First, make sure the GPness Poncho is good to go. I bought this cover from Roadster Solutions. It's designed to fit a MINI cabrio, with top up or down. But not with NO top. I tested it previously, and it just needed something ("garters") to hold it in place on the "hips" of the car. The Roadster Solutions folks sold me a few extra hold down straps with bendable padded hooks, and I sewed two of them on yesterday. Works perfectly.

    [​IMG]
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    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    Getting the track trailer packed and ready to roll. Stickers are important.
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    Finally, if I'm going to be driving a lot of miles to and from places, cruise control would be nice.

    On the old car, I gave up cruise when I did the transmission swap. With the auto body harness, there were key bits missing (like clutch pedal switch wiring) that are necessary to support cruise. But with the new car, theoretically, cruise should be an option again.

    But... I still want to keep my pretty carbon fiber steering wheel trim, instead of the ugly multifunction steering wheel (MFSW) buttons. Some of you may recall, on the old car, I did a hardware hack to use my old automatic shift paddles to control stereo volume. I decided to try a variant of this, to use the paddles to run the cruise control system...

    Here are the important parts: the paddles, and a disassembled cruise control pod.
    [​IMG]

    The paddles are designed to connect together and act interchangeably, so pushing or pulling either one would close one of two circuits. For the cruise, I need to simulate four button presses, so I'll need to separate the paddles and wire them independently.

    The MFSW pods work in sort of a master/slave configuration. The right side with cruise is the master with most of the electronics on it (e.g. for translating button presses to bus messages), and the steering wheel MFSW harness plugs into this. Then it has a connection to the left side audio/bluetooth pod, which is really just sort of a "dumb" board with buttons.

    Buttons on both pods work the same way. The circuit board has two pairs of contact pads under each button (the things that look like gold circles with an "S" through them). On each pair of contact pads, the "outer" half of the contacts is a common ground shared by all the pads; the "inner" half is the "signal" pad.
    Pressing the button shorts across one or both pairs of contacts with a conductive rubber button. I'm replacing the "shorting" action of the rubber button, with a circuit through the appropriate shift paddle. I do this by very carefully soldering jumper wires to the appropriate contact pads, and wiring these to the paddles.

    On each paddle, there are three wires connected to the paddle switch: Red, Green and Brown. Pulling a paddle closes a circuit on the Green and Brown wires. Pushing a paddle closes a circuit on the Green and Red wires. So Green acts as a common ground for the switch.

    Separate the paddles, tie green from both sides to one of the "ground" pads on the MFSW cruise button pod, and tie the other four wires to the signal pads as appropriate. In my case, I'm making the left paddle do on/off (push) and resume (pull), and the right paddle does +/accel (pull) and -/coast (push).

    [​IMG]

    After testing circuits with a multi-meter to ensure I don't have any inadvertent shorts, I carefully routed the wires, added plug connectors, and wrapped the board in electrical tape.
    [​IMG]

    Install in the wheel, carefully routing all the wires to avoid pinches...
    [​IMG]

    Moment of truth... start the car...
    [​IMG]

    Press the "on/off" paddle...
    [​IMG]

    Buwahahahahaha!!!

    That's a good sign. On/off works as it should. I'll do a full operational test as soon as it stops raining.
     
  10. cct1

    cct1 Well-Known Member
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    Need moar fishnet on those garters.
     
  11. Zapski

    Zapski Well-Known Member

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    Is there anything you can't do? You're like the Tony Stark of MINIs
     
  12. BlimeyCabrio

    BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIs
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    Hardwired my V1 and mounted it on the cabrio windshield header panel.

    Ran charging cable for my roll cage iPhone mount, that I use with Harry's Lap Timer.

    Test drove between storms here. Stark Industries flappy paddle cruise control TOTALLY WORKS, first attempt. Amazing.

    [​IMG]
     
  13. Zapski

    Zapski Well-Known Member

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    HAR!â„¢ :Thumbsup:
     
  14. ColinGreene

    ColinGreene Well-Known Member
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    [ame="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y2kIPN1SQe4"]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y2kIPN1SQe4[/ame]
     
  15. Savvy

    Savvy Well-Known Member
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    All hail the birth of the "Pa•Hoe•nix" and the reincarnation of the GPness.... :lol::lol::lol:
     
  16. BlimeyCabrio

    BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIs
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    The GPness has risen
     
  17. DneprDave

    DneprDave Well-Known Member
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    Do you pronounce that "Jeepness"?
     
  18. BlimeyCabrio

    BlimeyCabrio Oscar Goldman of MINIs
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    No. But you can, if you'd like. :Thumbsup:
     
  19. cct1

    cct1 Well-Known Member
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    That just sounds, I dunno, flaccid or something....
     
  20. abuzavi

    abuzavi New Member

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    0A68123D-7A90-47D6-87F0-54012E673DF6_zpsr9zah5ul.jpg

    I know I'm suppose to like this post, but your ill-fitted condom car is cracking me up.
     

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