Kermit and co - the Pub2Pub TVR, and other steeds.

Kermit and co - the Pub2Pub TVR, and other steeds.

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Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Wednesday 9th May 2018
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It's a bit of a hero, this car. Since July 2017, it's covered 27,000 miles across 25 different countries on three continents as part of the Pub2Pub Expedition; our journey from the northernmost bar on the planet, to the southernmost.

And it's been quite a trip. On a journey which started further north than the Top Gear Polar Special's highpoint, and finished further south than their Patagonia Special, it's faced all the extremes. It's seen temperatures from below zero to over 50 degrees C. It's travelled from 80m below sea level, to 4,700m above. It's crossed deserts, mountains, dry lake beds and salt flats. It's been drag raced in Texas and driven along the Death Road in Bolivia. In short, it's been put through hell, and came out in surprisingly good order. Not completely unscathed, but in pretty good nick nonetheless.





You can read more about the ownership experience so far here
And find out more about the 27,000 mile drive here

Kermit completed its journey a few weeks ago, but isn't exactly living in retirement, with a series of show appearances and smaller road trips lined up for the rest of the year - and that's what I'll be documenting in this little blog. The process of getting Kermit back up to full health after its 8-month ordeal, and the subsequent adventures of Britain's most-abused TVR.

And when, in the coming weeks, I expand my fleet so I'm no longer daily driving my poor, long-suffering Chimaera, I'll be documenting the ownership experiences of any additional vehicles too, as well as providing potted histories of some of my previous motors.

I hope you find my ramblings of interest... smile

(Photos by https://www.facebook.com/alvautomotiv/ )

Edited by Pub2Pub_Ben on Wednesday 9th May 18:47

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Wednesday 9th May 2018
quotequote all
paulyv said:
Chapeau!

You mention bringing the car back to full health. Will it be restored, or shall it retain those battle scars as testament of the the challenge much like the winning Le Mans cars do?
Hola!

The bodywork doesn't really need much work, to be fair. The only war wounds are a few scuffs on the rear three-quarter, where it had an argument with a taxi in Nicaragua. I'm going to keep it looking the same, just cleaner. It would really benefit from a proper wash and polish right now...

However what really needs doing is going over the mechanicals - it's just run for 27,000 miles far from its comfort zone with a minimum of TLC, so there's some catching up on general maintenance to be done there. There are also a few other specific jobs on the list. One of the exhaust tips escaped in Patagonia, and needs replacing. There's an 'interesting' bearing noise which I think is possibly some salt in one of the wheel bearings, but will be investigated next week. And with the MOT due next month, a thorough going-over of the whole car is needed...

Oh, and in an ironic twist which you couldn't make up, after all its been through, Kermit suffered its first breakdown last week - a broken throttle cable. I got it home by jamming the throttle open at 3,000rpm, but that's the first job on the list...


Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Friday 11th May 2018
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RC1807 said:
Hey, Ben.... Top marks, sir.

I read about your trip on the BBC news website, and posted about it in this section to someone else who'd just bought a 160k mile Chim.... Cool that you're posting here now, too.

May I ask, "Why?!", and "can you share more pics of your car in exotic or dodgier locations, please?"

Thanks!
Hi!

I guess the answer to 'why?' is the standard 'because it's there'. Ever since completing the mongol Rally many moons ago, long journeys in unusual steeds have been a hobby of mine, and having already riven the length of Africa in a Porsche, and crossed Asia in a Corvette, travelling the Americas in a TVR seemed completely logical.

There are a load more pics and coverage in Pistonhead's coverage of the trip, here:

Pre departure:
https://www.pistonheads.com/news/general/phers-pub...
Europe leg:
https://www.pistonheads.com/news/tvr-pistonheads/p...
North America:
https://www.pistonheads.com/news/tvr-news/pub2pub-...
South America:
https://www.pistonheads.com/news/general/pub2pubs-...
Mission accomplished:
https://www.pistonheads.com/news/tvr-pistonheads/p...

Enjoy! smile

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Sunday 23rd September 2018
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Hi folks, sorry for the radio silence on this thread - it's been one busy summer, and I forgot to update it!

Much of the car-focussed activity over the past few months has involved getting Kermit back to full health following its 27,000 mile adventure. While the car completed its trip with out any real breakdowns (the only real surgery being a clutch change in Nicaragua which, thanks to Powers Performance getting the replacement part to us from the UK in only a week, didn't delay us too much), that's not to say it was completely devoid of issues when it returned to the UK. Here are a few of the problems which needed solving:

The power steering had began to leak in Peru, and the steering felt heavy and uneven.
There was a lot of wheel bearing noise at speed
The tyres were completely shot
one of the exhaust tips was missing
The cooling fans weren't always kicking in
The HT electrics were shot, and keeping it running on 8 cylinders wasn't really happening

Additionally, late one evening, shortly after getting back to the UK, the throttle cable decided to snap, giving the car it's first 'proper' breakdown since we set off. I was able to get the car home by jamming the throttle partly open to give 3,000rpm, then driving back using only the clutch, but obviously, some TLC was definitely required...

Fortunately for me, the TVR community is a friendly and supportive place, and assistance was offered by TVR Parts - the official parts supplier who are now under the TVR Engineering umbrella. In return for the car promoting their business over the coming year, they agreed to help out the high profile patient on the parts front, and it was a pretty impressive stack of components which arrived shortly after Kermit's return...



I'm probably a pretty typical PHer, sitting somewhere between mechanic and idiot when it comes to competence when working on cars, so I agreed that I'd do what I could where it came to getting Kermit back up to full health, while the jobs I couldn't complete would be carried out by TVR Heritage garage Racing Green TVR, in Hampshire. So, with parts and tools in hand, I got to work. And as I did, the effects of 8 months of very high underbonnet temperatures showed themselves. For instance, here's why new HT leads were needed:



And here's what's fitted now - shiny ceramic leads:





Once I'd done what I could, the car was certainly running a lot better. Not perfectly, but better, thanks to new plugs, leads, air filter, accelerator cable, vacuum lines, and other service parts. Next stop was a new set of Toyos, which absolutely transformed the car. The tyres we undertook Pub2Pub on had been on the car since I bought it, which means they were at least 7 years old, and had covered over 40,000 miles. While we managed to complete the entire journey without punctures, suffice to say, they were pretty destroyed by the time the car made it back to the UK, and so a new set of Toyo Proxies turned out to be the best money I've ever spent on a car. Despite this, the lack of power steering and general grumpiness from the steering rack meant Kermit was still some way away from driving how a sports car should.



However, despite the fact the car was only halfway back to being 100%, it needed to hit the road a few weeks after its return for its first official engagement - the launch of Pub2Pub's very own beer - Pub2Pub Expedition IPA. This beer was a means of saying thank you to one of the trip sponsors, without whom Pub2Pub probably wouldn't have happened, and it turned out to be a remarkably pleasant tipple, with its 4.0% APV being a nice little nod to Kermit's 4.0l engine. And let's face it, there are few things cooler than having a beer made in honour of your car. If you get the chance, I wholeheartedly recommend you sample it...





After the beer launch, Kermit went into Racing Green TVR for further TLC. And it turns out, it was necessary, as the garage uncovered a few further issues which needed attention. Firstly, the catalytic converters in the manifolds had broken down, restricting gas flow and choking the engine somewhat, leading to its lack of responsiveness and muted tone. Fortunately, a pair of second-hand but functional mainfolds were sat in the corner of the workshop, and quickly replaced the defective items. Further down the exhaust, one of the tips was missing, due to the fatigue which resulted from grounding out on hundreds of oversized speed bumps on the Pan American Highway. Fortunately, the generosity of the TVR community came to the rescue once again, with ACT Engineering supplying a full cherrybomb exhaust system for the long-suffering steed. Not only did this look fantastic, but it also transformed the sound, giving it a deeper, more characterful note than the standard set-up, and looking great to boot:



Further work at Racing Green included replacing one of the lower front suspension wishbones, swapping out a grumbling wheel bearing, and the biggest task - sorting the steering rack.

It seems that the old rack's seals had failed somewhere on the trip, as on removal, the rack was found to be full of the dirtiest, fowlest smelling gunk imaginable, which probably contributed to the heavy, uneven steering feel the car had developed when crossing South America. The rack was sent away for a rebuild, and came back as good as new, albeit with some Tuscan components swapped in where the Chimaera parts were unavailable, and with the steering back on point, the new tyres, the improved exhaust sound and all the other attention which had been lavished on the car, it felt like a sports car once again, for the first time in quite a while.

I'd like to extend my thanks to the TVR Car Club, TVR Parts, Racing Green TVR, ACT Performance, Gaz shocks, Powers Performance and Classicline Insurance for their assistance both during and after the trip, in making this possible.



After several weeks in the workshop, I collected a transformed Kermit from Racing Green on one balmy Wednesday in June, and set off on Kermit's next adventure - Le Mans. But that's an adventure which I'll cover in the next update...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Tuesday 25th September 2018
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So, Le Mans.

When TVR give you a call and invite your car-of-the-moment Chimaera to take part in the pre-race Driver’s Parade, it doesn’t take you long to decide. You’re there like a shot, and the resulting 84 hours on the continent formed my first-ever visit to this most famous of races, as well as a trip to the Pistonheads Friday Service at the Great British Welcome car meet, at Saint Saturnin. A few photos from the weekend are below, while for the full story, here's a write-up I made about the rather memorable trip:

https://www.autoclassics.com/posts/reviews/le-mans...
























Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Friday 12th October 2018
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When you spend a long time with a car, relying on it, asking much of it, you develop an affinity for it. A kind of two-way understanding, if you were.

During and after the 27,000 miles I completed with my TVR on the Pub2Pub Expedition, the overwhelming sensation I developed was that it wouldn't let me down. It may develop niggles, it may need a more pro-active approach to maintenance than a modern lease-steed, but it wouldn't let me down. There was a feeling during those eight months on the road that the TVR was going to make it to the finish, whatever happened. Even when driving alone on remote dirt tracks in Patagonia or the Bolivian Altoplano, I never worried, despite the almost total lack of tools and spare parts I had with me.

Kermit the TVR showed itself to be a trooper - it simply didn't consider failure.

And this is just as well, because last week, Kermit faced its biggest challenge since the Pub2Pub Expedition, and one it unequivocally couldn't fail on. Kermit was to lead the first organised roadtrip to take place under the 'Pub2Pub Adventures' banner: The Eagle Rally. So what did this entail? Well basically, we're talking a 9 day, 2,500 mile round trip to one of Europe's most dramatic bars - The Eagle's Nest. Here's a bit more on Kermit's destination:

'In southern Germany, there is a mountain six thousand feet high. And on the summit of the mountain, there is a bar. To reach the bar, you must first negotiate the steepest road in Germany. From the top of this road, a tunnel takes you deep into the mountain, where brass elevator awaits. Powered by a U-boat engine, this elevator lifts you 400 feet through the heart of the mountain, to one of the most dramatic bars in all of Europe: the legendary Kehlsteinhaus. Better known as The Eagle’s Nest, this heady destination was first built as a fiftieth birthday present to none other than Adolf Hitler. Its marble fireplace was a gift from Mussolini, its walls eluded the bombs of the RAF’s Dambusters, and its slopes were finally stormed by the US 101st airborne division. It’s not only a spectacular spot to enjoy a beer. It’s a place of history.



So, a 2,500 mile, hard-driving blast across Europe to a bar on the summit of a mountain, then home again, in the company of a fine selection of other TVRs, Porsches, Jags and other sporty beasts. That's the sort of journey for which Kermit would require a full check-over before setting off, right? Wrong. The efforts required to get everything in place before our convoy's departure meant I didn't even have time to open the bonnet before we hit the road to Bavaria. However deep down, I knew Kermit wouldn't let me down - it thrives on this sort of use.

We hit the road on the last Saturday in September, from the Neil Garner Performance Engineering show, where about 100 TVRs had gathered in the glorious sunshine. However, we couldn't linger, as we had a date at Gatton Manor that afternoon, for the first ever Pub2Pub car Meet - a shame, as it looked like Neil Garner had laid on a fantastic event. Here are some photos from our time there:












From Neil Garner's base near Swindon, a few hours of winding tarmac across the North Downs took us to the Pub2Pub meet at Gatton Manor, which was already in full swing when we arrived. The turnout was excellent, with around 50-60 classic and performance cars, the buffet lunch was great, and the jewel in the crown of the meet was provided by Les Edgar, who dropped by for a chat, and brought along the new TVR Griffith for all to see - the first time it had been displayed with the rear spoiler retracted. Quite a coup for our first meet, which sets an intimidatingly high bar for our future events. Here are a few photos from Gatton Manor, starting with the 14 cars - including Kermit - which make up the Eagle Rally, on the start line, next to the new Griff:














As you can see, it was certainly a memorable afternoon in the company of fine automobiles and people, but for Kermit and the Eagle Ralliers, it was only a brief stop on the dash to the Eurotunnel, and as the sun began to drop, we hit the road for the continent, and ultimately, the Eagle's Nest, on the far side of Germany.

And I'll tell the story of the drive there in the next update...


Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Sunday 14th October 2018
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amc_adam said:
This is brilliant, and the most unlikely car i would have thought to use on road trips, probably why its so entertaining to to read! Hats off to you, Trevor has done you proud.
And what a destination to end up at, the Eagles Nest is on my list of places to go (think i may have accidentally drove past it on the way to Worthersee a few years ago, stupid boy.)
Keep the updates coming in, i blinkin' love a good road trip story!
Thanks Adam,

Yeah, the TVR is might be an unusual choice for the kind of use I've been subjecting it to (we're talking 32,000 miles across 26 countries on 3 continents in the last 15 months... and counting!), however the more you think about these '90s TVRs, the more they make sense. Everything about them is pretty simple - Rover V8 drivetrain, basic electrics with a minimum of fancy ECUs, tubular steel chassis, there's not much on them you can't bodge to keep going if you need to, and thanks to the Land Rover-based motor, there are independent garages all over the world who can work on them (for instance on Pub2Pub, the only two garages we visited were both LR independents, in Nicaragua and Peru.)


Another benefit of the TVR is its light weight. Most other overlanders we met on Pub2Pub were driving ostensibly tougher vehicles; however these vehicles would generally weigh over 2.5 tonnes, and hence put a huge strain on things like suspension components. At just over a tonne and with cushioning, high profile tyres, the TVR puts very little stress on such moving parts, and so is strangely very well suited to covering long distances on the sort of rough roads we encountered in Latin America.

Anyhow, thanks for the interest, I'll get the post about the trip to the Eagle's Nest up soon - it's a great place to drive to, by the way smile

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Tuesday 3rd September 2019
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I've just noticed it's been a while since I updated this, so without any further ado...

Since the last time I posted, on the TVR's return from the inaugural Eagle Rally last Autumn, things have been pretty busy. Firstly, there was the small matter of three days spent on the TVR Car club's stand at the NEC Classic Motor Show last November:



We kinda went to town with the display, setting up the full camping arrangement from the Pub2Pub Expedition next to the car, complete with tent, camping stove, sleeping bag and a load of rocks scattered around the front of the car, giving a visual approximation of some of the under-wheel conditions we faced in South America.

The display went down well, and it was great that so many people recognised the car from the coverage Kermit's trip had received on Pistonheads, and in other places, even if the beautiful paintwork on display elsewhere on the TVR stand did make it's scruffiness stand out somewhat.



After the NEC, the TVR was SORN'ed for the winter. And fittingly, given it has became a bit of a standard bearer for the message that old cars can be just as reliable as new ones provided they're used regularly, this SORNing had unexpected consequences.

After being left for a month, a bodged attempt at a start flooded it, and it was another few weeks before I got new plugs fitted and fired up the V8. This led to a pearcing scream from the motor and a column of smoke rising from the aux drivebelt. The reason? The Alternator had seized solid, with the belt squealing over the non-spinning pully.


Why would an alternator seize like that? Simple.



A year earlier, I'd driven the car across the world's largest salt flats, which were flooded at the time. The whole car, including the engine bay, had been soaked in salty water and while the first thing we'd done after leaving the salt flat was to wash it very thoroughly underneath, evidently this hadn't been enough for the alternator, which had taken the opportunity to set solid over the month of non-use.

Fortunately, the alternator was the only issue which the winter of inactivity had coaxed out of the long-suffering TVR, and so with a new one fitted its first trip of the year beckoned - a 2-week camping trip to Fontainebleau, in France. And being a camping trip in a sports car, that means I was packing light, right? Wrong.





I'm forever amazed by just how practical this car is, and Easter's France trip was a case in point, as it carried two people, a 4m diameter bell tent, woodburning stove, chimney, furniture and climbing gear to France and back, and proved to be the perfect holiday wheels while there. This practicality is one of the things which attracted me to the Chimaera when I bought it 8 years ago, and to me, it remains one of it's biggest draws. Such underrated cars...

On the way home from the trip to France, I detoured via an event which doesn't generally see many TVRs - the Overland Adventure Show, at Stratford upon Avon. Here, Kermit rubbed shoulders with several hundred expedition-prepped vehicles, ranging from converted soviet missile launchers to jeeps, and despite its rather modest appearance, turned out to be better-travelled than the vast majority of them. For context, the Land Rovers on the opposite pitch had just came back from a trip to the Pyrenees...



And so, after two days at the show, where I gave several talks about overlanding in unusual steeds (one on the Pub2Pub/TVR trip, and another about crossing Africa in a Porsche 944) we were properly into spring, from which point I'll bring the story of Kermit's post-trip adventures up to date later in the week...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Thursday 5th September 2019
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Andy665 said:
For anyone enjoying the thread you really do need to get the book, got my copy on day of publication and read it within a couple of days. It's a great read
Thanks Andy, I'm glad you enjoyed it. I was slightly nervous that by including the mental health sub-story I might alienate some of the readership, who may have been expecting more of a swashbucklingly heroic road trip yarn, but the subject needs all the airtime it can get and the feedback so far seems to be positive, so I'm glad I did.

TR4man said:
You packed a wood burning stove into a Chimaera??

Wow bow
I did indeed, though it's actually not so big an achievement as it seems, as with the legs and flue removed the stove itself packs down into a box 40cm square, which goes in the boot easily. The bigger challenge is the tent itself, which weighs 25kg and even when packed, is still pushing 3ft long - fortunately if fits into the Chim's parcel shelf area just fine, with space above for the stove flue and the bell tent's gargantuan poles. In fact, the biggest challenge of the camping trip was getting the bouldering crash pad home; our solution may have restricted our motorway speed somewhat...



ECG100 and G11MDS, I'll be more on it with this thread in future - promise! smile

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Friday 6th September 2019
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bolidemichael said:
Hi there, you didn't include any posts or pics from the trip to the Eagle's Nest which seemed quite interesting! Please do share if you find a moment and keep up the adventuring!
Hi Michael, you're absolutely right - apologies for missing out the Eagle Rally.

As it's the flagship event for Pub2Pub Adventures - the road tripping brand I've launched off the back of Kermit's journey - the TVR has actually completed two Eagle Rallies since getting back from its trip across the globe - the first in October last year, and the second this May. Here's an article and pictures from the first Eagle Rally:

https://www.pistonheads.com/news/tvr-news/life-aft...

And here are a few more photos, taken from this year's drive to the far side of Germany and back:






















So, that was the 2018 and 2019 Eagle Rallies - each of which totalled about 2,800 miles from the UK to the Eagle's Nest in deepest Bavaria and back, and each of which Kermit completed with the bare minimum of issues (shredding the aux belt while being revved hard in the Porsche museum's underground carpark is the only one which springs to mind - luckily I was carrying a spare.) I'm planning on running the 2020 rally in June, with Kermit once again at the fore, and am looking forward to it already...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Friday 6th September 2019
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Fishy Dave said:
Book ordered, enjoyed the first one, fully expecting this one to be just as great. smile
Thanks Dave. I'm glad you enjoyed the Africa book; hopefully this 'tricky second album' won't disappoint in comparison... smile


Andy665 said:
Pub2Pub_Ben said:
Thanks Andy, I'm glad you enjoyed it. I was slightly nervous that by including the mental health sub-story I might alienate some of the readership, who may have been expecting more of a swashbucklingly heroic road trip yarn, but the subject needs all the airtime it can get and the feedback so far seems to be positive, so I'm glad
As someone who has had his own struggles with mental health I found it insightful and positive that you did include it - your thoughts / feelings resonated with me a lot

In no longer ashamed of admitting I have struggled (And continue to battle the demons from time to time) and the more it's brought out in to the open the better
Thanks for the feedback Andy, and I'm glad you found the inclusion beneficial. While the sub-story only accounts for maybe 1/50th of the book, it still felt like a big deal including it. Luckily, the response seems to be positive, so all's good...


Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Saturday 7th September 2019
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While returning from Bavaria in May, Kermit suffered one of it's traditional issues - a cracked headlight lens. This repeating annoyance had first happened during the big trip across the world, when a stone was kicked up in Texas and took out the driver's side lens glass. I'd finally fixed the issue in Argentina, and all was good until this year's Eagle Rally, when a coach ran off the road slightly and put another rock through the same light, somewhere in Central Germany - talk about lightning striking twice. With an MOT looming, this was something which would need sorting pronto:



First, the cowling needed to be removed...



Chimaera build no. 2303?



A TVR tradition - breaking out the silicone sealant...



...then holding everything in place with gaffa tape while it sets... job done.

With that palava finished, it was just about time for the MOT. And given we're talking a car which in the previous 18 months or so, had completed 37,000 miles across 28 different countries, been driven across a flooded salt flat and spent the best part of 6,000 miles keeping up with hard -driving sports cars on two Eagle Rallies, it'd be a walkover, right?

Wrong, but fortunately things could have been a lot worse; Kermit failed this year's MOT on three points:

One - the big 'MOTUL' sun visor which had been fitted for its role in the Le Mans driver's parade last year came within the wiper's swept area.
Two - a leaking front shock absorber.
Three - corrosion on the headlight reflector, on the same side which had been broken by flying stones twice in the past two years.

On the plus side, the MOT offered a chance for a good poke around the chassis, and while it's not exactly a pretty sight, it's still all solid and reasonably well protected, so is good for another year. Evidently the only casualty of the salt flat adventure was the alternator...

So, three things to fix. The first wasn't an issue, as I'd been in two minds about keeping the bright red sun visor, so I had no issue with losing it in the event.
The leaking damper could have been more of an issue, but fortunately GAZ Shocks - who had supplied the dampers for the world trip - were very on point with their customer service. I posted the part to them on the Thursday of the MOT fail, and had it back the following Tuesday morning - certainly can't complain about that! And while getting the dampers off a 20 year old TVR can be quite a faff, in this instance the fact the bolts had been undone two years previously during Pub2Pub meant removal and refitting was a 5 minute job.



If only the same could be said for replacing the headlight reflector. Though saying that having done two lenses in the previous 18 months, I was at least well practised in this part of the car. So, for the third time, it all came apart and was reassembled with the RHD reflector, which is shared with the Porsche 964, and is basically like gold dust in TVR circles.



Putting the old and new reflectors side-by-side, it's easy to see why it failed the MOT - being exposed to the elements for thousands of miles had taken its toll...



New lens in...



...and showing just how tired the passenger side lens looks, as Kermit pulls into the test centre.

Even then, it wasn't plain sailing - I hadn't quite got the alignment right, which meant I spent the MOT tester's lunch break jacking the car up to get to the access hatch in the wheel arch and going through a process of trial and error until the beam was pointing in the right direction. And that was that - another 12 months motoring, and a sign of relief breathed to boot, because given what I've put this car though, it could've been a lot worse...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Thursday 12th September 2019
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Is ThrowbackThursday a thing on Pistonheads? If so, here's one from earlier in the summer when, after travelling the world for what seems like years, the TVR finally went home for the first time.

And it was a somewhat melancholy experience to be honest, especially pulling up outside the factory where it was built, and seeing first hand how what was once a hive of activity is now a quiet and sleepy backwater, with the past gradually being forgotten...


Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Sunday 29th March 2020
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So, this is the new normality. Stuck at home twenty miles from the workshop where my TVR lives, which means I won't be seeing it for a while now.

As there's nothing else to do, it seems like a logical time to update the story of Kermit...

Following Kermit's second Eagle Rally last year, along with a variety of other road trips including one to France and the trip to Blackpool, it was starting to need some TLC - not surprising, given it had covered something close to 15,000 miles in the 18 months since it had returned from its trip to Patagonia on the Pub2Pub Expedition.

With this in mind, I made plans to take the TVR off the road for the winter, following its appearance on the TVR Car Club stand at the NEC Classic Motor Show last November, and the drive back from that event was the last time it was used on the public highway.

A busy winter meant that it wasn't until February until I was finally able to get it up on the axle stands and get to work.





With the car off the ground, I planned to give it a thorough service, go over all the mechanicals and fix anything suspect, repaint the chassis as best I could, and also smarten up the interior, which was still in the same state in which it finished its globetrotting expedition - that's to say, pretty horrific.

What followed was a series of jobs which fell into two separate categories - 'wow, that was pretty straightforward', and 'damn you TVR for making this such a faff.'

Fitting a new brake master cylinder was very much in the latter category, with the access being famously inadequate. Saying that, a slow and patient approach paid dividends, as did releasing the six bolts which hold the pedal box in place, enabling it to be moved forward by an inch or two, the extra wriggle-room making all the difference.



In comparison, fitting new brake discs and pads was comparatively straightforward, even if I did need to saw down an allen key to make releasing the rear calliper possible. While I was there, I decided it was important that the callipers got a lick of gold paint, to go with the gold stickers which the car has been covered in for the past three years. Hopefully this will add to the look once it's back on the road, rather than turning out slightly tragic...





The old fuel pump, which had been on the car since I'd bought it and had pumped all sorts of dodgy gas in places like Ecuador and Bolivia was a breakdown waiting to happen, and so in a spot of preventative maintenance I swapped it out for a new pump from TVR Parts. A new fuel filter went in too, along with a thorough check of the fuel lines, which got the thumbs up for now.



All the fluids were to be changed, and while the gearbox oil was a pretty straightforward job, the diff was somewhat different, with the drain plug refusing to come undone for love nor money. This meant it was necessary to syphon the oil out through the fill hole before replacing it, a job which was pretty straightforward with the correct tool:



The chassis was in pretty good condition thanks to the POR15 which I'd applied liberally before Pub2Pub, but there were a few places where it could do with a touch up, and so I spent many hours crawling around beneath the car repainting anywhere on the structure where the protective paint looked less than perfect. The result isn't nearly as pretty as the shiny white chassis restorations which seem to pop up on my social media and make me feel guilty about the state of mine from time to time, but we're still on the original outriggers, so it seems to be coming up trumps when it comes to rust prevention - even on flooded salt flats - and that's what really matters.



One part of the car which hadn't survived the ordeals of the previous few years, however, was the engine mounts. The rough roads of the Pan Americana had pummelled them sufficiently that the engine had sagged down and the exhaust manifolds were actually touching the chassis. Changing these took a full day of work and much cursing, thanks to a large degree to my incompetence at all things mechanicing.



Under the hood, there was a predictable amount of work to do. The power steering hoses were replaced as they were leaking, an ACT silicone coolant hose set was fitted, a new idler pulley installed as the previous one's bearing was grumbling, various sensors were changed and the whole engine given its first clean in years as it was predictably filthy after the car's travels and various fluid leaks.






(photo taken before the great toilet roll crisis of 2020...)



Definitely the smartest Kermit's engine bay has looked in many a year.

With the mechanicals moving in the right direction, it was time to look at the interior. The first job to tackle was the dashboard, as the original walnut veneer was warped and cracking badly, thanks in part to the heat and humidity of some of the environments the car had travelled through. The big question was, what style to go for? After many hours of discussions in the pub on this very subject, a decision was made - turned steel, for a '30s Bentley vibe. After a few methodical hours of swapping the dash over, I'm rather please with how it's turned out:



But as far as the interior was concerned, the dash was just the tip of the iceberg. The carpets were in a terrible state, the hood's plastic window torn and the seat's leather was looking very tired. After considering re-dying the carpets, I decided to bite the bullet and order a new set, and it turns out that there's quite a lot of carpet in a Chimaera:


Thanks, Central TVR!

Changing the carpets is a pretty easy job so long as you take a slow and methodical approach to it, and it has the bonus of revealing plenty of the factory scribbling which all these cars seem to have:







When I shared this graffiti on the Pub2Pub Facebook page, it was suggested that I should add my own mark on one of the panels, to keep the tradition going. My ego rather liked the idea, and so I customised the fibreglass in the centre console:



I was rather pleased with the effect.

Once the new carpets were in, the car was beginning to look pretty good, and the spring road trip season was looming, with its first trip out planned for the TVR Car Club season opening show on the 5th April, followed by a trip to France for Easter, and a Pub2Pub Adventures road trip down to Italy in May.



With these dates in mind, the trimmer was getting the seats, door cards and hood finished by the end of March, ready for the trips. In fact, they surpassed the target, calling me last Tuesday to tell me they were all done and ready for collection.

The last piece of the rebuild jigsaw was ready.

Unfortunately, the lockdown beat us by a couple of hours. With only a tiny amount of work left to go, the car now won't be getting finished for a good few weeks...

Until then, stay safe people, and good luck getting through this...

Ben

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Sunday 29th March 2020
quotequote all
Andy665 said:
Nice to see it getting some love but hope all the battle scars are not removed, its a car with an incredible story and its scars are part of the story
Indeed, that side of things has had a lot of consideration, and the general appearance will definitely not be changing - the stickers and scars will be staying, and after much deliberation I decided not to have the alloys painted in shadowchrome as it'll be too much of a deviation from how it looked on the big trip.

The interior refresh is a slightly different kettle of fish, however - as myself and others spend quite a lot of time sat there, making it a more pleasant environment will definitely make the car more appealing to drive places, a fact which kinda over-rode the desire to keep it as a time capsule of the Pub2Pub Expedition. Not that it's changing that much; other than the dashboard it'll still look roughly the same, just cleaner...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Tuesday 20th October 2020
quotequote all
Revisiting this topic for the first time in a while, it's poignant to see that my last update on my TVR was back in March, and saw the car in a state of disassembly - the reason for the lack of updates in the intervening time can be blamed on... well, you know what.

So, what's happened in the past six months? Well, when lockdown happened back in March, I was a few weeks of graft away from having Kermit back on the road. However, the restrictions meant I was suddenly unable to continue work, as my workshop is on a working farm and at the time, it would have been inappropriate to pop up there to tinker with my old car. This meant that I didn't see Kermit for over three months, during which time it was sat on axle stands in a state of moderate disassembly, while the interior was mostly about 30 miles away at the trimmers. Who were, obviously, closed.

As spring became summer I was able to get back to grips with putting the TVR back together and getting it on the road, but then there came another setback. With the travel restrictions I was also forced to cancel the summer European tours which I was to be leading in the TVR, removing all the urgency to get it back on the road. Additionally, I was focussing my car-related efforts on finally finishing the book about my Corvette/Singapore drive, rather than the TVR's needs. This meant that I drifted along over the summer, putting in a day's work on the car every week or two until a few weeks ago, when to my surprise I found that it was all reassembled and ready to roll for the first time since last November.

And so when the sun came out in Devon a few weeks ago, I took Kermit out into the daylight for the first time this year, and finally sampled the results of its rather interrupted mini-restoration:









Back in February when I started work, my goal was to keep the car's unique, battle-scarred external appearance, while lifting the tired interior to become somewhere pleasant in which to spend long hours on the road, and simultaneously making the car's mechanicals as dependable as possible. And luckily, my first impressions are that I've succeeded. In my opinion the restored interior leather, new turned stainless steel dash and quilted leather door cards really lift the interior, which was previously suffering from the wear and tear of its trip across the world - the leather was cracked and stained, the wood veneer dash cracked and flaking and the rear window split. Mechanically, everything feels much more taunt now and, touch wood, the car has been running flawlessly ever since the first twist of the key last month.

So, that's the TVR all back on the road and ready for adventures just as winter rolls in, accompanied by talk of further lockdowns. Kermit won't be getting put into hibernation just yet however, as right now it's standing in as my daily driver, while I get to work on fixing some issues on my Volvo 240 daily - hopefully this time I'll get the work finished in a slightly faster time though...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Wednesday 21st October 2020
quotequote all
Usget said:
Alloy dash, quilted leather - it's basically indistinguishable from a Bentley Continental T!
I'm glad someone made the connection - that was certainly the inspiration behind the look.

Growing up, I always used to love the turned steel dash which was an option on the outrageously torquey/expensive Bentley coupes of the '90s, and its part of the brand's DNA which goes right back to the big blower Bentleys of the '30s. Now, I can't afford a Bentley - blower or otherwise - but that doesn't mean I can't at least borrow some ideas from them...

therealsamdailly said:
Lovely job. A car that is much more than the sum of its parts
Thanks, I can't wait until the restrictions are lifted and I can get back out there and keep adding to the car's story. Though after all the work, I may have to invest in some seat covers before it goes anywhere too adventurous again...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
As memorable milestones go, owning any car for ten years is a notable one. Owning a sticker-clad TVR for ten years is definitely notable, and given it's an anniversary which, for me, passed a few days ago, I figured it's high time for an update.

Not on the TVR, though.

Since last autumn, when the TVR was briefly back on the road following its mini restoration which ended up dragging out over much of 2020, attention has been focussed on other members of the Ben fleet. Firstly, the daily driver - a Volvo 240:



I bought this fine machine back in 2018, when I needed a new daily on my return from the Pub2Pub Expedition in the TVR, and it's been providing sterling service ever since. But when last autumn came around it was in need of some attention, and with the TVR back on the road and able to stand in as a daily, it was time to give the mighty ovloV some long-overdue spannering.



As well as a general service and once over, a few tasks stood out. Firstly, being a 33 year old machine which has spent its entire life on our salty little island, some rust repairs on the underside, and in the rear wheelarches, were required. The headlight bowls were looking rather tired and past their best, and so a shiny new set was purchased for £60 and fitted. Some clunking in the front suspension was traced to a broken droplink, which was replaced, and as the rear suspension had became rather droopy over the years, I took the excuse to fit a new set of sports springs.

These take the ride height down by 40mm in comparison to a standard 240, but as mine is the 'sporty' GLT model which sat 15mm lower than standard, the drop is 25mm. And I have to say, it rather suits it - along with the smartened-up front end, the work has given the car a new, pugnacious look which I rather like, as well as tightening up the handling no end.





And thanks to all the work, last December the Volvo flew through its MOT without so much as a minor - happy days!

The third car in my current fleet would have rather more trouble with an MOT, however. In fact, it hasn't had one since 2009. Luckily, it's old enough not to need one, but still, I feel a bit of work may be appropriate before it gets back out on the road:









The tattered carcass you're currently viewing is 'Daisy the Second', a 1974 Mini which was one of my first-ever road trip cars. I paid £650 for it in spring 2007, and promptly took it on a road trip to Spain a few weeks later, followed by a New Year's tour of Turin, Venice, Slovenia, Croatia and Hungary at the end of that year. But it quickly became evident that after a lifetime in the unforgiving climate of the south west, the rust was setting in, and it needed some work. The only problem was, there was always something more pressing than giving Daisy the attention she deserved. What follows is a litany of excuses...

In 2008, the AfricanPorsche Expedition dominated my time. Then, work and writing the book about that wee drive took over. After that was the V8Nam Expedition, then a new business, then the Pub2Pub Expedition in the TVR, and then the small matter of writing a book about that one. And all the time, Daisy sat patiently in a barn, awaiting its turn to receive some TLC. However, fast forward to the 'new normal', and thanks to Covid shutting down my work and providing me with the time to finally get the V8Nam book finished, I find myself in a situation with no further books to write or trips to make happen.

In other words, it's time to get Daisy back to her former glory. And who knows, maybe plan an adventure for her while I'm at it, to celebrate fifteen years of ownership next year...



This clearly isn't going to be a quick job - not least due to the fact that I stripped it down about a decade ago in a rare moment of free time, and most of the car has been sat in boxes ever since. I'm not exactly a master at all things mechanical, and so restoring Daisy will be quite a learning experience for me, in many respects. And with the bodywork being the most pressing issue, the first lesson in the course is cutting and welding. Tackling a few jobs on other cars over the years - most recently on the underside of the Volvo - has given me enough confidence to get stuck into the easier jobs on the bodyshell, and hopefully this will enable me to progress in a manner which enables me to finish the job. Then, it'll be the small matter of an engine rebuild on it's 998, and getting it all back together.

I'll be firing some further updates onto here as work progresses, so watch this space for some truly appalling welding...

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Wednesday 21st April 2021
quotequote all
RC1807 said:
Appalling welding? You don't make roll cages, do you? (another thread....)

Anyway, I look forward to seeing the updates!
I've not seen that thread. However, I could probably make roll cages in the style Lancia were rumoured to have done on some of their '70s rally cars - i.e. out of cardboard. Metal may be a bit ambitious for me, however...

Jonmx said:
Cracking thread. I'm guessing you're Dartmoor way? I'll keep an eye out next time I'm tootling about over there (Exeter based here).
Thanks; I'm over in Plymouth, but am often to be found roaming the Dartmoor and Exeter regions. Because let's face it, when you live in Plymouth, getting out of town regularly is a good thing.

G111MDS said:
Fantastic fleet, and great to see the classic Mini. smile
Cheers - hopefully over the next few months it'll start actually looking like a classic Mini, rather than the remains of one which has been picked clean by vultures... smile

Pub2Pub_Ben

Original Poster:

589 posts

171 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
quotequote all
I've just noticed it's now been over a year since I've updated this thread - oops, apologies for that. The upshot of this is, it's definitely high time to revisit the fleet...

The TVR first. I've now owned 'Kermit' for over 11 years, and it's currently nudging the 100,000 mile mark, a reasonable increase from the 38,000 miles it had covered when I bought it. During Covid, I didn't have much in the way of opportunities to use it, but the memories of that lack of use have certainly been banished during the summer, with around 4,000 miles being notched up on a couple of European trips. The first of these took place in May when, as part of a group of 15 Chimaeras, I took it down to a chateau in Burgundy, to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Chimaera. As this was it's first big run since Covid, and also a kind of shakedown from the work I'd done on it during the lockdowns, it wasn't a trouble free trip. The main issue was overheating, caused by the swirl pot corroding out at its base, resulting in a coolant leak. This was fixed by going back to my banger-rally roots, and throwing in a load of radweld to get me home, before flushing out the system and replacing the offending part, and overall, these issues didn't detract from what was a great trip. Here are some photos from the drive:

















While a drive down to Burgundy doesn't exactly represent the most dramatic of drives, it must be said that it was great to finally be back behind the wheel of my well travelled TVR, making noise in a foreign land for the first time in three years. As doing just that was such a big part of my life before the travel restrictions came, for me the trip represented a symbolic end to the weirdness of the previous few years. Normal service was resumed, and the fact a chateau, the winelands of Burgundy, perfect weather and a great bunch of other TVR owners was involved too, made it all the better.

But in many ways, the France trip was just a warm-up for what came next - the Chimaera's run down to Italy in June, which I'll cover in my next post.