Are griffith engine bays naturally scruffy?
Are griffith engine bays naturally scruffy?
Author
Discussion

Nick Brough

Original Poster:

380 posts

245 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Hi,

I am genuinely intrigued as to why so many Griffiths for sale are totally immaculate until it comes to the engine bays’ and engines. I don’t mean to be offensive but many of them I have seen seem quite grotty.

Are they particularly difficult to keep clean, or is it that Griffith owners would rather be driving and leave polishing engines, engine bay’s and their nuts to Chimaera owners.

Regards

Nick

stecozz

227 posts

189 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Theres a lot of TVR owners that dont know how to open the bonnetbiglaugh

thats were the bad reputation comes from i think;)

neutral 3

7,975 posts

194 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
YES, they Are a bugger And a back breaker to keep clean !!

The front wings are wide which makes it a stretch to reach in , my back and other bits of me are giving me a lot of pain at the mo ( Bike smash in 2010 ) which makes it very awkward and the bonnet doesn't open high enough .

The early cars circa pre 97 I think , had the inner wing tops painted satin black which looks Orrible very fast . The later ones were painted body colour Which is far nicer and easier to keep clean.

Lots of alloy bits and bobs are a pain to keep clean ( Swirl pot ) etc etc . Over the winter the alloy parts get a furry deposit on them and discolour badly .

My headers look awfull , but stainless ones are circa £ 800 I beleive !

carsy

3,019 posts

189 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Go on them i`ll bite.


stecozz

227 posts

189 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all

Moycie

536 posts

221 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Okay, I'll play too...biggrin



Nick Brough

Original Poster:

380 posts

245 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
carsy said:
Go on them i`ll bite.

Moycie said:
Okay, I'll play too...biggrin

Any chance you could go round some of the ones for sale and sort them out? smile

Nick

Rob_the_Sparky

1,000 posts

262 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Maybe because driving them is more important than spending my life polishing? As you may tel I'm not a polisher! If the car is not decaying and the outside is presentable then in my eyes it is fine. I have a job, wife, child that I'd rather be spending my time on than polishing bits of the car that are not on show. I also would rather spend cash on performance or just maintenance than on "shiny bits".

Maybe this is a contraversial view, but I'm more interested in driving it than polishing it.

gavgavgav

1,569 posts

253 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
They are very difficult to keep clean, the design of the front end fires dirt, grit, sand etc across the engine. Shiny finishes do not last long. There are some very hard areas to remove debris from, mainly around the injectors/ inlet manifold. Avoid parking under conifers, those bits get everywhere. The fun but is when a leaf or twig lands on a hot part and smokes a bit.

Moycie

536 posts

221 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Mine was luckily "factory fresh" as it were, when I bought it - so keeping it good just needs a quick tosh over whenever it has a wash...plus not being used as a daily driver and keeping it garaged most definitely helps.

Nick Brough

Original Poster:

380 posts

245 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Rob_the_Sparky said:
I'm more interested in driving it than polishing it.
I can understand that.

Nick

7 TVR

2,589 posts

192 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Spit and polish


jeboa

546 posts

285 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
My generally grotty engine bay - but just to show what a great colour Clives Y Piece turns after some heat has been added by the exhaust gases!!


Alexdaredevilz

5,697 posts

203 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
cry

neutral 3

7,975 posts

194 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Jeboa, what ignition system is that ? Whats it like ?

jeboa

546 posts

285 months

Tuesday 4th September 2012
quotequote all
Alex - don't be glum - you'll cheer up once you have that LS safely in place!!

The ignition is EDIS8 running off a Megasquirt 2. The last bracket I made had the coils 'horizontal' which meant the leads were crossing over each other. Wasn't too bothered how 'neat' it looked, but crossing the leads meant the connectors weren't seated very well. Having the coils in this orientation means one side runs to 1,3,5,7 and the other to 2,4,6,8 - therefore no 'crossing' needed and the connectors are nicely seated on the coil towers.

bomb

3,794 posts

308 months

Wednesday 5th September 2012
quotequote all
My Grot-Box.







Edited by bomb on Wednesday 5th September 09:48

Chilliman

12,300 posts

185 months

Wednesday 5th September 2012
quotequote all
stecozz said:
Theres a lot of Griffith owners that dont know how to open the bonnetbiglaugh

thats were the bad reputation comes from i think;)
EFA
Chilli wink

Marty V8

578 posts

210 months

Wednesday 5th September 2012
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Theres always this as well. Now not my car, but I dont think the new owner will mind.....







carsy

3,019 posts

189 months

Wednesday 5th September 2012
quotequote all
Have to say Marty, that is one of the nicest engine bays i have seen.

Cant believe you sold after all that hard work you put in.

You missing it yet?