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gm5735 Offline
#1 Posted : Thursday, 3 July 2014 8:24:11 AM(UTC)
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How about a competition to celebrate the automotive underachievers amongst us? Maybe even get it judged by someone unimpeachable, and who has never made a mistake? (Dr Terry?).
My unbeatable entry is the brilliant decision to upgrade the 1.6 litre carburettor Camtech engine in my girlfriends Camira with a 1.8 litre injected Family 2 from a JE Camira. Why would you bother? What was I thinking? Do you even remember the Camira? 151,000 someones bought them.
Bet you can't beat that.
Dr Terry Offline
#2 Posted : Thursday, 3 July 2014 6:47:35 PM(UTC)
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If you're looking for someone who has never made a mistake, don't include me on your short list. I believe that a man learns by his mistakes & I've learned a lot, if you get my drift.

I do remember the Camira very will, I think I owned about 5 or 6 of them over time. I never had the 'pleasure' of owning a 1.6 carby version, very underpowered & poorly built. My first one was a 1.8 PFI JD SL/E 5-speed wagon. Great car on the open road & good power & economy, but the gearing was too tall in the city, I think it was more suited to the German Autobahns. The wagon area was great though, it could take a bigger cargo than my brother's XE Falcon wagon.

Most of the Camiras I owned were JE 2-litre autos, great cars & had virtually all the faults of the early models ironed out. Good power, economy & space & surprised many bigger cars at the traffic lights. Good air/cond & power steer as well.

Unfortunately the Camira sales suffered badly due to the dramas in the early JB series. Everything from rust, bad fit & finish, bad electricals etc. etc. Later in life they had dramas with water hoses, cambelts & engine mounts. Out of the 151,807 Camiras sold, well over half (85,700) were JBs. Many owners of these probably would have sworn off owning another Holden.

There were 4 different engines in Camiras, 1.6 carby (JB/JD), 1,8 PFI(early JD), 1.8 TBI (late JD) & the 2.0 PFI (JE). The worst 2 IMHO were the 1.6 carby & 1.8 TBI, & you actually went to all the trouble to convert from one to the other. A great underachievement !! If you were going to do a conversion at all (hardly worth the effort), you would fit the JE 2-litre, but really !! You have my vote.

Dr Terry
If at first you don't succeed, just call it Version 1.0
tripple webers Offline
#3 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 5:13:53 AM(UTC)
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I remember seeing an add for a Holden wreckers in a Melbourne paper quite a while ago, it stated Holdens Wanted all models NO Camiras, that about says it all.
Warren Turnbull Offline
#4 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 6:49:16 AM(UTC)
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I once worked with fellow who had a 69 Valiant. The engine failed so he put in a 4 cylinder diesel.

Warren
gm5735 Offline
#5 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 7:27:55 AM(UTC)
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Thanks Dr Terry. It was a 1.8tbi from a JD. I hasten to add that this was 20 years ago. "Just drops straight in", the man said. It did too. What he neglected to mention was changing the tank, the filler neck, running new fuel lines, new wiring loom to the fuel pump, a new interior loom and mounting the ignition/efi electronics, modifying the glove box so it would fit, and changing the instrument cluster to get the speed switch to swap the ignition advanve map at a given roadspeed. And a million others things I've forgotten. Maybe the four cylinder diesel would have been a better choice.
I do note your maths. 5 OR 6. Not really sure how many? That's a lot of cars to go through to get one that works.

I wonder if, in 20 years or so, at a car show somewhere, a immaculate original JB Camira will be on display, with an admiring crowd of geriatrics muttering to themselves "I had one of those, wish I'd kept it".
gm5735 Offline
#6 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 7:42:15 AM(UTC)
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But this wasn't intended to be a bucketing of Camira.
Was that an official entry Warren?
petaus Offline
#7 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 8:24:34 AM(UTC)
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When I was an apprentice I remember seeing a ea falcon centre point fuel injection was fitted with a 350 holley.
pete.
The last camiras 2.0 mpi were rockets
pete
gm5735 Offline
#8 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 8:51:36 AM(UTC)
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Both the Holley and the injection? Did it actually run? A bit rich was it?
Dr Terry Offline
#9 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 5:56:14 PM(UTC)
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quote:
Originally posted by gm5735

I do note your maths. 5 OR 6. Not really sure how many? That's a lot of cars to go through to get one that works.


I have an automotive repair & parts company & go thru delivery vehicles at a fair rate. Some I get to keep for 450,000 km+, like one of my current VT wagons. Others, for one reason or another (usually careless driving) don't last as long. A few of the Camiras died in the line of duty.

Given that I've probably owned more than 120 cars over the last 40 years, 5 or 6 is not a bad guess for cars from over 20 years ago.

Speaking of silly conversions, I seem to remember Peter Wherret putting a Sigma 2.6 litre into a VB or VC Commodore (in place of the 202) to demonstrate how good modern 4-cyl engine technology was in the early 80s. What resulted was a car that didn't perform as good as the 6-cyl but used the same amount of fuel. I think that one should be made an entry.

Dr Terry
If at first you don't succeed, just call it Version 1.0
AMunro327 Offline
#10 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 6:57:37 PM(UTC)
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Probably like everyone else who fiddles around with motor cars, I've had a number of epic fails. Probably the worst failure for me was when I put a Chev and Saginaw into a HR ex cab back in about '72.

It was a low buck conversion. Didn't go for rack & pinion, kept the standard steering box and offset the Chev to the passengers side to give clearance for the steering box.

Couldn't afford a new 'through the inner guard ' exhaust system, but picked up some amazing works of art second hand. These pipes resulted in a few problems. They were so close to the clutch slave cylinder that on occasions the fluid must have boiled and the piston popped out of the cylinder when you put your foot on the clutch. There was also so much heat around the steering box that it tended to "tighten up" after a while. Last but not least, the bonnet got so hot that if you drove the car in the rain, the car resembled a Stanley Steamer.

Tyres were the stock HR rims with retreads. Rear end was stock HR. I ended up pulling this thing apart and selling it in bits after I broke a diff. Broke the bearing carriers after showing off in town one night. Made a hell of a noise when it went off.

Not sure why we have all this regulation and Standards to put up with these days !!

gm5735 Offline
#11 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 9:27:41 PM(UTC)
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Dear me. There's just so much to like about that. From the cunning use of retreads as a safety valve for the diff, to the Salvador Dali surrealist exhaust system.
I think you may have taken the lead....
AMunro327 Offline
#12 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 11:09:35 PM(UTC)
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Bet there'll be heaps more, if only the guys will own up to it.
Dr Terry Offline
#13 Posted : Friday, 4 July 2014 11:16:20 PM(UTC)
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If that HR V8 doesn't win, I think the extractors should at least earn some bonus points.

An ex-cab with stock width retreads & a SBC V8 up front, It must have been a good handler.

Dr Terry
If at first you don't succeed, just call it Version 1.0
Warren Turnbull Offline
#14 Posted : Saturday, 5 July 2014 3:28:57 AM(UTC)
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Those extractorsare the best set I have ever seen,beats Plankman's set he made of plumbing pipe and fittings for his High performance 186.

The plugs would be easier to change than on normal Chev motors.

Warren
gm5735 Offline
#15 Posted : Saturday, 5 July 2014 4:05:07 AM(UTC)
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Brian Plankman and the 6 in a row HO with three on the tree racin' shifter? I wonder which forum that belongs in.
AMunro327 Offline
#16 Posted : Saturday, 5 July 2014 5:24:23 AM(UTC)
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No. 8 was a bit of a challenge Warren. From memory, remove the floor covering, remove the screws that held in the plate under the steering column, remove the plate, then instant access to the plug lead & plug.
detective Offline
#17 Posted : Saturday, 5 July 2014 6:17:24 AM(UTC)
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...great topic fellas .. the very first EH V8 conversion i saw was in 1974.. a burgundy coloured sedan with the Chev small block mounted via a big plate across the front of the engine utilising any and all appropriate holes, and then held up by welded steam pipe to bolted angles on the forward most area of the subframe just behind the radiator....no isolating rubbers or such....

....i have no idea what became of her....

Edited by user Saturday, 5 July 2014 6:19:00 AM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

HGV8 Offline
#18 Posted : Saturday, 5 July 2014 7:51:25 AM(UTC)
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Getting a little of topic but a old work mate of mine "Mick Houston" bought a brand new 1964 EH Holden, took it home and fitted a modified 283 Chev engine. He was well known in NSW drag racing circles around that time. The EH was black and called Jedda.
j.williams
johnperth Offline
#19 Posted : Saturday, 5 July 2014 11:20:37 AM(UTC)
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i knew a gy with an XK120 jag.
blew the motor couldn't afford a replacement (this was about 30 yyears ago so motors were were scarce) so dropped in a stock 6 cylinder flat head 38 dodge engine and 3 speed (on the floor) box.
while he was at it he didn't think much of the white paint so painted it red. with a brush.
other manufacturers duds include ford's ranch wagon from about 1958, thousands of them went out with the thrmostat installed wrong so the countryside was littered with ranch wagons with cracked heads, the 1952 ford prefect AKA ford defect, which was unable to be driven on narrow roads because of the steering wander, it took a good deal of practice to anticipate just where it was going to steer next and correct in time, lets not forget the vauxhall VX 90 which couldn't be driven more than 10 k from a service station because of their unreliability, the many early VWs which formed impromptu barbecues usually at traffic lights, and tended to fall over at corners because the rear wheels folded in when pushed a bit hard into bends rather like the infamous corvair, and their endearing habit of spitting spark plugs and stripping the thread from the spark plug holes. finally we had the first falcons which looked cute with front wheela at a wierd angle because the strut towers were made too weak and tended to fold in gradually increasing the inner camber. nearly all of them had to be recalled and strut braces fitted. ford had no excuse for this they had been using macpherson suspension for years on the equally heavy zephyr, but it was no match for aussie roads, as no doubt we will find the current crop of eurotrash in a few years.
they were the good old days will they ever return? what replaces them now?
HK1837 Offline
#20 Posted : Saturday, 5 July 2014 5:59:34 PM(UTC)
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Big heavy (circa 2000kg+) 4x4 dual cabs with 2.5L and 3.0L common rail diesels. Even worse, people who buy them as they are "cheaper" to run than petrol equivalents!
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If we all had the same (good) taste, who would buy all the Fords?
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