Monday, October 24, 2011

The Younger Woman

Oliver and I went to a housewarming party in Everett, where he scored a younger woman.
Allow me to clarify. Oliver was playing the room like he does; life of the party. He had already won over the host with his tacky gift- a Hippie Nutcracker. In the time it took him to make his way from the front door of the house to the back door- he had greeted six friends and created four more. Nothing out of the ordinary there. That's how he rolls. The surprise was what happened next. One gentleman who escaped both categories of "established friend" and "brand new friend" -floundering somewhere in the middle- said to Oliver, "I have a '98 Eclipse in my driveway. My wife hates it. Come and get it."
And there it was. *pause for dramatic effect* The decision to dive into the world of DSM's (we had dabbled before- dipped our toes in and found the water to be warm but expensive). Instantly, Oliver had a new best friend and a new project. Lucy and I had a new lady to compete with.

The next day, we found ourselves in Marysville under a massive Evergreen preforming emergency surgery on a tired neglected Eclipse. With the amount of moss and slime on the car it was difficult at first glance to identify its paint color. Upon further investigation we confirmed it was not green, but black-ish.

"I'll be shocked if you can get it started." said Ollie's new friend, Steve.
"Challenge accepted." stated Ollie.
It goes without saying that Oliver resuscitated the car. With no brakes, no clutch, no gas, and no registration, he slowly backed the young lady out from under the tree that had been her home for a number of years. He barked at me to jump in The Starship (our family's Ford Explorer- hey we are practical where we need to be) and follow close.
I followed him to the nearest gas station where he put a few bucks in the tank. 
"Did you just bring this thing back from the dead?" asked some sketchy Marysville transient. 
"Actually, yeah, I did," replied Oliver.
"Should've left it," called the man as he crossed the street.
The look on Oliver's face clearly said, "No appreciation." 
I added, "No imagination."
Fueled up, we were ready for our journey. We mapped out a route that was longer in distance than our usual course- avoiding highway speed and most importantly, cops. Completely comprised of county back roads, this was a gamble with no brakes, a severely slipping clutch and a donut spare. If the car was not up for the task, we wouldn't have a shoulder to rest on, and the cops we tangle with would be county cowboys. But ultimately the fact that cops in the county are sparse (comparatively speaking) and the speed of travel would be a gentle 35-45 mph sealed the deal.
Forty minutes later, we pulled into GTA, dragging swamp scum through the parking lot. Huggies (our intern) greeted us, sobbing, begging us to not make him wash our new addition. 
No sooner did Huggies have Swamp Thing shining like a de-lamming diamond, Ollie had a gleaming new ACT clutch in his hand. 
WHAAAT!? (I inserted a sideways look at Lucy) "Serious!?" I asked her.
If I was my four year old, I would have shouted "NO FAIR!" But since, I'm a grown adult I just thought it and stomped my foot.
"Can you believe it was only $400 bucks?" He blurted.
I choked.
"Baaar-gain!" He sang.
This is how it always starts. The younger woman gets the attention, then the expensive gifts... 
Well, boys, Lucy and I are toting "age before beauty" and we are done messing around.  

Saturday, October 22, 2011

I Won't be Part of Your System

Over the course of weeks... Even months, I have become increasingly frustrated with my build. I've been at a standstill. Either there is no room in the shop for us on build night... Or the symptoms of motherhood has overwhelmed me (exhaustion, over extension, packed schedules and financial ruin). More frustrating than the afore mentioned, is the lack of availability of parts and accessories available for my generation of Supra.
Shopping for body kits has proved impossible. There is a very small selection of kits available for the Mark III- no wide bodies outside of Japan. My choices appear to be one of two evils: totally tacky or basically boring. If I like the front end of one set up, the rear looks like a fat chick in a mini skirt. If I like the rear, the front looks OEM modest. Mix and match you say? Can't. The side skirts won't line up.
I refuse to comply with society's taste in aftermarket kits. What is it gonna take to make my own? I get overwhelmed thinking about it.
My opinions on available options in Carbon Fiber hoods are identical to above. OEM or ugly. Those are my choices. Aftermarket for the MK3 features gills. Like a shark. Not the image I am trying to impress. To make matters more complicated, I want sleek head lights; which I realize I will have to fab myself as that too doesn't appear available in the marketplace. But all hoods are cut to accommodate the factory set up.
Round and round I go, figuratively spinning my bald tires on my factory wheels realizing this is why people build their Honda- parts are cheap and plentiful.
In my desire to hear good news I acted as if I had my ducks in a row and asked our best friend forever, Ricky Bobby, to swing by build night for a paint consult.
"What you want, I'm not sure its possible," He told me. Not the good news I was looking for. My imagination betrays me at every turn.
Ricky Bobby promised to spray out some samples for me and assured me that if anyone could do it, it would be him, "I'm the best there is, plain and simple..." You know the story.
I threw in the build night towel and sulked home. I drew myself a bath and sunk in to my eyeballs. I sighed loudly mimicking a motor boat and told myself Lucy and I would overcome this. She will rise like a phoenix. No more obstacles.
Wrong again.

Friday, October 14, 2011

September 2, 2011

When Build Night rolled around again, Oliver was busy cranking out inspections on 24 cars for one of our biggest accounts while simultaneously helping our brother-in-law, John, practically rebuild a Camry that was better suited for the scrap yard than the highway. Needless to say, I was on my own with Lucy.
I proceeded to pull the radiator, condenser, wiring harness and ECU until an old friend showed up with a 120# puppy. That's right, puppy. A Saint Bernard pup that outweighed me. That distraction was sufficient to pull me away from my project.
The following week, the shop was too full for Lucy and I to fit- so, I went home. Again the next week, and the next week, and the next week...

Pulling the Head off the Supra

On August 26th, I found myself at build night again. Baby Vera was again swaddled in the front office- this time with Mickey Mouse Clubhouse on to drown out any shop noise. I gloved up and committed to pulling this head.

Drew was back to help with only minimal mention of my hood still being in the way. Oliver was less occupied with other Build Night Participants and was more available to guide me. I had to slap the boys' hands away many times to remind them this was my project. I super duper luper (as my 4 year old, Lola, would say) appreciate their wisdom and guidance- but I want this car to be mine. When she's done, I want to know I did it.
As I dug in, I found evidence of others having been there before me:



Unacceptable.
With the assistance of caffeine and air tools, this job went much quicker than last week!
Once all the bolts, hoses and wires were removed and unplugged, the head was ready for lift off.
Once the head was removed, it was immediately evident what caused catastrophic engine failure. Pistons on cylinders 2 and 3 were warped/melted/damaged (I'll let you look for yourself) from detonation, probably from a previous rebuild done poorly.



Good Piston:




Bad Piston:





Wicked Bad Piston:

So, that answered the question of "Why no compression?" Not that I really cared. I didn't want to build the 7M anyhow. But, Oliver needed to satisfy his curiosity, and so we have.

Open Build Night

On Friday, August 19th, after our first complete week of business in the new location, we hosted our first open build night.
Our friends came- and brought friends- with their toys to work on. Liability waivers were signed in blood by all participants and locked in a vault. 
By happenstance, we had our sister and brother-in-law's Eddie Bauer Explorer in the shop for service so we laid down the rear seats and set up our kids in the back with sleeping bags, popcorn, sippy cups and Lilo & Stitch on the DVD screen.
With the kids occupied, I was ready to roll up my sleeves and pull the head off my Supra.
With Oliver acting as the roving foreman, I got started with very little direction. He was busy instructing people how to use the lift, helping with a brake job on a lifted Toyota, diagnosing a Scion tC, and occasionally barking my direction to tell me what next needed removed. It was slow going. 

When our friend, Drew, arrived on the scene, I had a little more consistency in direction. Course, arguments regarding whether or not Lucy's hood should be removed for easier accessibility were nearly debilitating. Oliver thought there was no reason to take it off; we would have to roll it outside eventually and he didn't want visibly "torn apart" cars residing in front of his building. Drew takes no offense to "torn apart" cars, and made it clear he felt only an idiot would continue to work around that obstacle. As idiots we all marched forward- the hood in place. 
At midnight the air compressor kicked on and woke our sleeping newborn swaddled in the front office. By the time I finished feeding her, my eye lids were heavy and Drew had decided to leave in search of a watering hole. 
Bummed that I could not muster the horsepower to finish pulling the head off the Supra, I decided to call it a night.

Guerrilla Tactics Automotive & Performance moves to Monroe

In early August 2011, we got the keys to our new shop located in Monroe, WA. Nearly 4,000 square feet of bare canvas for us paint our dreams.









We cleaned. We painted. We installed our first lift. And before we opened our doors to the public on August 15th, Oliver's RX-7 was nestled into its new home just outside the office window.




Not wanting to put it off another minute, Lucy and I rolled on the scene in time for our upcoming open build night.


 Let the games begin.

Lucy's Homecoming

On Friday, July 29th, we made the trip to Sumner again- with a trailer this time! My day had come- Lucy was coming home. 

.
Our buddy Damian, owner of Eco Smart Junk Removal, rolled with us- offering the service of towing my car home. Once she was trailer'd, the bill of sale was signed and title was in my hand... we were ready to head home. I held my breath the whole time, unsure if Damian knew how precious his cargo was. 


 Damian got loose on the Snohomish River Bridge coming into Monroe on the 522... but then that's how Lucy got her name- it's only fitting that she got loose on her homecoming... and since nothing made contact: no damage = no worries. Hang on, Lucy... we'll be home shortly!


*sigh of relief* Home Sweet Home! 
Not caring that it was pitch black outside, Ollie and I wanted to determine why she won't start. Is the engine blown like the previous owner suspected? Is it a blown head gasket? Or something more simple? We decided to put some power to the battery and try to start it up. Take a listen with us:





Yikes. No compression. There goes plans of being able to pull and sell a functioning engine to help fund this project. Oh, well. Can't be too disappointed. Knowing myself, a running engine would only distract me- prolonging my engine swap and delaying progress.
Lucy, welcome to the family. You are in good hands.