Hi All,
I have had this Rabbit a couple dozen years now; it was my second car. The story is long enough and varied enough that I feel like I qualify as the owner and two PO's. I expect the story of all of it will trickle out as this post goes on.
My Rabbit is a 1984 GTI with a collection of parts from a donor 1990 G60 Corrado. I have on-and-off been doing little bits, but I am changing gears to a hard push to do whatever hacks I need to do to get the motor to run for 3 seconds or so. Not as a race, but I just want to hear it and I don't want to wait until the car is fully together. Here is the car prepped for easy in-and-out of the motor:
You will notice two colors to the body work. Just before moving to Utah, I swapped the roof for one with less rust and no sunroof. Sorry I don't have pics of that. Here is my list for getting the motor to fire (no particular order):
- Swap in-tank filter from diesel style to gas style.
- Install the replacement gas tank (from the same donor that the roof came from)
- Drain fuel tank of diesel, flush with some gas
- Install and plumb Corrado fuel pump and surge tank
- Fill the gas tank with a few gallons of good gas
- Install cheap/throw-away Chinese headers to the motor (I am not even going to bother with gaskets, I may or may not attach the rest of the exhaust just setting it on the garage floor)
- Put the motor/tranny back in (only a 10-15 minute in-or-out at this point) and attach starter
- Prep/connect the wiring harness to the motor and toss most of it through the windshield opening. Wire up to some sort of battery floating around
- Pull plugs, squirt in a little atf, and let that sit a day or so.
- Give it some oil pressure for a couple minutes while occasionally rotating the crank with a wrench. Line up and reinstall the distributor.
- Fire it up, say, "Woo Hoo," and shut it down since the cooling system won't be hooked up yet and I still need to open the supercharger.
I finally cleared off the large table in my workshop, so I threw the wiring harness on it and started pulling out pieces that I don't need. While the unused portions don't keep me from starting, reducing wiring mass and extra bits just makes it easier to deal with.
A 1990 Corrado starts out with over 38 lbs of wiring as compared to just over 15 for the GTI. I am down to 32 lbs with the sunroof, ABS, spoiler, and auto-seatbelt wiring removed. I lost some time hunting for the cruise control wiring, but that is mostly a standalone system and I think is currently not attached. Next up is pulling the wiring for the power mirrors and windows. I really thought hard about retrofitting those in, but I think leaving them out is the better move. I am not cutting any wires except at factory splices. Any wire that I pull out by the pin at the connector I can put back in with no harm and no foul. I have Corrado style pins and crimper on order, so I can take the back half of the Rabbit wiring harness and install it into the Corrado fuse block without using splices.
Well, here we go...
Matthew