by FATORANA » Mon Jul 24, 2017 3:26 am
I have just been prompted by a fellow Alpineist in Australia that there is some conjecture as to the confirmed whereabouts of the "Silver Dream Machine", UK reg E29 MTP. It is true that the car now resides in Sydney Australia and has only, as of early May 2017, been put back on the road. I have several other projects on the go which would explain the delay in its resurrection since the accident it had back in 2012. In saying this it has actually been fully repaired since June 2013.
I originally wanted to have the car fully engineered for unrestricted road registration in my home state of New South Wales. This meant that it needed some modifications to comply with ADR"s (Australian Design Regulations). It had to pass an IM240 emissions test which initially it failed miserably. After the installation and plumbing up of a carbon canister from a Subaru, an adjustable fuel pressure regulator and a catalytic converter I eventually managed to get it over the line. The next thing to consider was child safety restraint hard mounting points. They actually have them from factory behind the rear headrests, however they are not positioned directly in the centre of the rear headrests and "dead centre" was the requirement. This meant I had to fabricate and weld up some plates and fix them on the engine firewall side so that the restraint retainers could now be dead centre above the headrests. The next requirement was that of side intrusion bars in the doors. This was actually a bit tricky as they had to mount either end of the door and not foul the window operation. I used some aluminium box tube and right angle to fit them in neatly and thankfully without having to butcher the doors which I was extremely mindful of. The final touches were some simple labelling in respect of correct brake fluid, fuel type and tyre placard specs.
Now by the time all of this was completed it was only a matter of months before it turned 30 years of Age. In some states of Australia this would mean that it becomes eligible for a "Historic" registration classification. The compliance process for this is far simpler and way more economical so in the end this is what I did. Hindsight would dictate that I didn't have to do any of the compliance work mentioned above but I don't regret it as at least I know that if required it will now also qualify for unrestricted registration if I decide in the future.
It has had several other running repairs since to include a fuel pump, water pump clean injectors and basic service requirements, other than that is has been a Gem. It now frequents many places around Sydney's North and Northern Beaches. Plenty of UK expats often stop me at a servo or in a car park for a look and chat. Will try and post a few happy snaps in the future.
All the best
Howard Poignand