My first roadside repair

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phaetn
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Posts: 575
Joined: Thu Jan 02, 2014 7:42 pm
Your car is a: 1974 Fiat Spider 1800
Location: Ottawa, ON Canada

My first roadside repair

Post by phaetn »

So I finally picked up my Spider from the mechanic after work yesterday (Friday) and somewhat nervously drove it home. I kept an eagle eye on temp, oil pressure, etc., as I know the car hasn't yet been dialed in (carb is uppity) and was very low on coolant. I just wanted to get it home to tinker on it.

So I did.

Spent a few hours after the kids were in bed and tinkered away into the wee hours of the morning: fixed non-working brake lights (it was the switch but was a pain as sometimes it wold work and other times not), fixed a headlight retaining ring and then the trim (had to drill into the body as the original mounting point was rusted out); changed all plugs, looked at carb throttle body to make sure both barrels were fully opening, topped up coolant, installed fire extinguisher in passenger footwell, etc.

Today I actually drove it quite a bit (probably about three hours or so in all). I was happy that temps seemed reliable and nothing too out of the ordinary. My confidence in the car really grew. Then, after my last errand and about 10 minutes from home - the throttle stopped responding. Ack! The engine didn't die, but throttle did nothing. I immediately knew what was wrong: the throttle linkage to the carb body must have slipped. Turns out a nut had fallen off. I scoured the road for it -- even picking odds and ends of debris is the hopes of fashioning a makeshift fastener just to get me home. Finally settled on a set of vice-grips that I have as emergency tools in the trunk.

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Very gingerly applying throttle I made it home. An 8mm 1.00 threaded nut did the trick, plus locks of loc-tite. The folded tab that had been there before to prevent the nut backing off clearly hadn't worked.

I was only at the side of the road for about 10 minutes, which isn't bad, but it was only the second day of driving the car. :)

Cheers,
phaetn
1974 CS1
32/36 DFEV; CompuTronix ign.
9.8:1 c/r; 40/80 intake cam w/ Isky springs
Vicks' SS header & adj. cam pulleys
A/R's progressive coils, Koni Yellow dampers
205/50-15s on CD-66 style rims
Momo wheel, Corbeau seats w/ 5 pt belt
pics and HD vids
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spiderdan
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Joined: Thu Jan 24, 2013 9:30 am
Your car is a: 1968 124 Sport Spider
Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Re: My first roadside repair

Post by spiderdan »

Hey phaetn, well done.
A little knowledge, a bit of "MacGiver" and you are now a real Fiat Spider owner.
Congrats and hope to meet up with you soon.
Should be getting mine out of storage next weekend (one more rain)
Always fun taking the 1st drive.
Adventure is the result of poor planning...
Dan
1968 124 Sport Spider
"Angelina"
2015 Toyota Camry XSE (hers)
2016 Jeep Wrangler Sahara Unlimited (cottage toy)
http://s1342.photobucket.com/user/68spi ... t%20Spider
http://www.youtube.com/user/Coontache/videos
AriK
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Posts: 1148
Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2011 7:58 pm
Your car is a: 1979 Fiat Spider
Location: Montreal Canada

Re: My first roadside repair

Post by AriK »

Could have been worse! Everything went dead on the passing lane on a busy highway 20 on a part with no shoulders because the ignition cable to the coil decided to pop off :roll: . Glided to the right and brought that lane to a standstill while i popped the hood and plugged her back in. Was the longest 30 seconds of my life. It was either that or run. I can tell you that sucker is now glued in place.
Slowly you"ll work out the bugs and things will come to order. Be patient.
Fi8spider
Posts: 378
Joined: Sat Jan 03, 2009 7:12 am
Your car is a: 1974 Fiat 124 Spider

Re: My first roadside repair

Post by Fi8spider »

I had the same happen in the heat of the battle in my race car, a plug lead worked it's way loose from the dist cap instantly making the 131 sound like a Subaru :oops: . Cable ties have been employed to resolve the issue, easy to remove, I keep a little bunch of them in the tool bag now as I do a few 10, 13mm, assorted nuts and bolts, bits and pieces.

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