Old Car, Old Man, One Gets Restored, One Doesn't
Here's me and Max after some snowblowing this year. We were fully frozen:

Got him a couple ratchets and a couple pocket pry bars. His favorite color is orange:

At this point, I'm supporting his desire to spend his money of tools and his want to learn to fix cars. He could be spending his money on worse things and could be a kid that sits on the video games all day. He would rather go to my wife's parent's farm and clean stalls and run the tractor and make a few bucks over gaming. He saves his money and he uses it for tools. I'm proud of him. Poor kid is just like his dad.
I understand the health issues and what they take from us as well as what they give us. I have never really mentioned why I retired early, I don't enjoy pity. Around 2012 I began getting dizzy, really dizzy, to the point of randomly passing out. This of course made driving a dangerous activity. I have been poked, prodded and hooked up to every machine imaginable trying to get a diagnosis, none ever came from the medical community though they did give me some cool scans of my brain waves, lol, after about 3 years of any test they could come up I gave up on them. It took a Naturopathic doctor to figure it out, no cure but temporary relief. I have a kind of plaque in my ear canals that interferes with the movement of the fluid that helps balance. There is a technical term for it, I forget. Over the years I have learned from him how to break it up and temporarily correct it. In the past few years there has been some success at blasting them into little pieces, a very specialized procedure, but it carries risks that I am not ready for because I have got better. When I do drive it is on back roads for while until my brain figures out how to accommodate the motion. Long trips are easy after an hour or so, short trips are still difficult but I haven't hit the floor or passed out in a while. Short trips are easier now, but I always start out on back roads, never straight to the highway. In the past few years my back and knees have been more of a problem than my balance.
We persevere and life continues to be what we let it be,
This is me and my oldest in 2009 with my 84 Corvette. I still have the car


She even helped me reassemble an L83 in 2013-2014ish. This was another flood car I was restoring:

My oldest boy helping me on the same 84 engine:


He loved that 84 so much, he would sleep in it in the garage when he was tired and we were out there:

Of course he's a bit older now. He's 6'3 and 225lbs. He's a good kid:

My little Jade last spring (I think) in my 93:

My middle son that is into tools also has loved cars for some time:


I'm sorry to hear of your medical condition. It honestly sounds awful and I know that going to medical appointments and feeling glimmers of hope and feelings of worry and let down are are very real things. I'm very glad that you are gaining confidence and are still able to drive. You do amazing work and it reflects in this thread. You Corvette is beautiful and it has come a long way since day 1. It's motivating to read your thread and each post is very informative and I appreciate all of your updates! I wish you nothing but the best in life and I pray that you find relief and hopefully things will continue to be better without the specialized procedure.

@SirReal63 Good on you for figuring out how to live your life to its fullest "in spite of." Thanks for sharing. I agree with Dave: it is motivating to read your thread.
I ordered the trans tunnel carpet pieces and sill pieces and once it is a little warmer I will order the MAMO color match "dye" to try and get it close enough. The replacement distributor from FiTech dropped into place and the car fired right up before my little camping trip.
This will broken in a couple of parts or the post will be way too long, and I am not finished yet.

The difference between the two, the other end is aligned in the same plane as it would be mounted on the TB, although it slid down a little in this pic. The white lines show where it is aligned to be even. I will have to use the 89 filter as there was no feasible way to use the larger 90 air filter, not the end of the world, I don't really expect there to be a massive difference in airflow between the two.

The other major difference is the size and where the center lies.

The other difference is the width, the 90 is wider than the 89.

I believe I can merge these and have it fit like it is supposed to without any interference. I should have waited a day or so to make my marks, pain pills and thinking sometimes don't align but I had a small weather window so I went for it. The mark on the old piece is in the wrong spot for the cut. It should be above the round mounting holes, not below them. Ooops. I cut it like an idiot and had to cut it again and glass it back together. The old 89 part was smaller and fit into the 90 but I had a lot of cutting and shaping to make the transition smooth on the inside.

Once the pieces were cut and the old side fixed from my bad cut I then slid the old into the new and took it to the car to see how I would need to align them so it would fit without obstruction. I marked them and ran some self tappers into the overlap so it would not move. I noticed the alignment for the center would be almost exact if I slid the two pieces to the drivers side and trimmed down the passenger side overlap and heated it up to bent the pieces to where it fit like the other side. The extra length at the center of the cut was trimmed to fit. The glass and epoxy is where I had to mend back the piece I cut wrong.

I epoxied the two halve together after using the heat gut to massage the two pieces until they fit tightly together. The self tappers and paint lines allowed me to get in back into the proper place after applying the thickened epoxy. The bond was much stronger than I was expecting, but it needed a lot more work to make it look right.
After it was cured I sanded the lip down and tried to get it as close to flat as I could, it wasn't a smooth and fair transition, I knew it wouldn't be. I mixed up more thickened epoxy and created a fillet that I could glass over. I used the epoxy all the way around the seam and filled most of it in. It took several applications and sanding to get it close enough.
This is in process, I did not take enough pics of each step but you get the idea.
This is the top, the visible part in process. the first layer of fillet done.

After a little sanding to see what still needs to be filled.

The bottom glassed but not yet sanded. I sanded the bottom after this cured but did not bother to try and make as finished as the top. It isn't visible and each step takes hours for the epoxy to cure before I can sandit.

This is where I am as of tonight. I still have a lot of work to do with sanding and filling. The work so far is just to have enough material to sand out and make look halfway decent. I coated most of the top in leftover resin as I will probably have to paint this airbox when the glass work is done. Having it all epoxy should help the paint look right because of the consistent texture, plastic will probably paint differently than the epoxy and the seam will be much more visible.

I will need to fill what looks like a divot in, it isn't as deep as it appears but it looks off, even though there is a divot in the original piece right where I made the cut, the divot is not larger because of the merge.

This is the passenger side I had to cut down and mold with heat. It is going to need a lot more work.

The edges were by far the most difficult, this is the drivers side where both pieces were pushed together, but the 89 was more round and the 90 more square. This will need a little more work. but is getting close.

I have to take a break from this for a couple of days, the temps are marginal for epoxy to kick, today was too cool so a lot of it ran instead of sticking like it should. Temps will be 85 to 90 this weekend which is perfect for this kind of work, it was only 62 for a high today I used fast cure hardener for everything but the last coats.
The passenger side almost done, this is the side I had to cut, heat and mold the plastic.

Most of the divot is filled in.


I am not sure how much more I will do before paint.
I need to fix where the filter cover mounts, I am not sure yet how I am going to do that. It will be more difficult to get the needed strength in that area.
The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts

For the time being I have been collecting parts to keep me busy. I got the front carpet set and the Cognac "dye" from MAMO so that is upcoming. I am also going to replace the knock sensor, the ones for the speed density cars are different, Rock Auto already delivered the GM replacement.
I just got back from another score... Hooker 2149HKR.

Though I am not sure I want/need to do headers for $300 bucks I could not pass them up. They may be wall hangers or I may flip them, or maybe I will install them, I don't know.

I am hanging onto the ECM, for now, then I will probably sell it and the APYP prom. At this point the FiTech has impressed me, everything works as it should. It doesn't seem to have lost any power or economy (not that mpg's are important) and it starts right up. If it continues to be trouble free I won't need the original ECM any more.
I am hanging onto the ECM, for now, then I will probably sell it and the APYP prom. At this point the FiTech has impressed me, everything works as it should. It doesn't seem to have lost any power or economy (not that mpg's are important) and it starts right up. If it continues to be trouble free I won't need the original ECM any more.
"HOW ULTIMATE TPI INJECTION WORKS: The injection method of the FiTech Ultimate TPI system is NOT sequential with reference to the engine – as there is not a cam synchronization signal that would indicate which cylinder is actually cylinder #1 compression from the distributor. However, the injection method differs from the stock TPI injection method in that the injectors do fire in a sequential-but-not-synchronized-to-engine-position order. This means it will inject 1 pulse per 2 revolutions, in the firing order of 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 but the injection will not be timed to inject, for example, on the closed intake valve.
The stock TPI computer injects in a different manner of injecting all injectors once per revolution, and all at once or all in each bank at once. This double injection requires halving the injection pulsewidth, which causes issues at low loads and large injectors and inconsistent fuel delivery. With the sequential injection method, the pulsewidth is larger and more controllable with respect to the injector’s ability to deliver consistent fueling and more equal cylinder-to-cylinder, delivering a more stable operation."

















