November 15, 2015

Clutch Cable Replacement

That out-of-focus frayed thing is Ludwig's clutch cable. Here's how you fix that. First, buy a new clutch cable (not pictured).


Disconnect the clutch pedal shaft (left) from the rest of the assembly (right) using a 13mm socket and wrench. Or two 13mm wrenches if you want. Or two sockets. Whatever.

After they come apart they'll look like this.

Now take one of those 13mm sockets or wrenches or whatevers and undo this housing from the frame.

That results in this, which you further reduce...

...to this, by taking off that clevis pin. When you got the new clutch cable, you got a new clevis pin.

Don't use it, because it's probably crap. The one on top is the one I had, stamped VW-Audi. See how that round part is really of two parts, pin and washer? That makes it so the pin can turn. The pin in the new one lacks that virtue and cannot. A perfect example of the death by a thousand cuts we bus owners constantly face (thanks, hippie wannabes).

Attach the new cable to the assembly with the old pin and some grease. Any piece of metal that moves against another piece of metal deserves some grease for its trouble. 

Thread the new cable from the front to the rear, greasing it along its length (not shown; hands too greasy to take pictures). Reattach the housing to the frame and the pedal shaft to the bar from the housing.

Thread the rearward end of the cable out of the way for when you put the engine and transaxle back in. Done.

This was the old cable before I chucked it. It had four strands left.


That was pretty boring so here's a poster I saw on my way to the auto parts store, to liven the mood.

November 7, 2015

Littermates

Whenever I see a '74, like this '74, I compare VINs to see how close they are to Ludwig.

 I've seen a pretty close one before but unfortunately didn't photograph or write down its VIN.

And once I saw a '74 for sale that was a day older than me.

But this is the closest yet: a mere 3,419 away from Ludwig on the assembly line, to the younger side. (Obscured VIN because who knows why, but people fret about such things.)

Let's do a little math: there were 224,993 buses built between 1 August 1973 and 31 July 1974, for the 1974 model year. Excluding weekends and holidays there were 252 working days during that time, so we can figure they built about 893 buses a day. Meaning this bus is probably about four days younger than Ludwig. It's reasonable then, I think, to suppose that they were acquainted, or were at least within sight of each other, and possibly came over on the same boat, depending on this bus's destination code (Ludwig, a UF, immigrated via San Francisco).

The owner told me he has a friend who'd owned one-off VIN buses. 


November 5, 2015

ACVWs of Livingston


This one was at Mammoth, actually.




Might not be an AC VW.