Excellent job! Enjoying your vidéos, as they‘re out of the true restoration World … not meant to make things easy … but showing how hard it is to do things right even if using modern technology (e.g. 3D printing the glovebox)
3D printing is brilliant. It is turning classic car preservation on its head. If money is no object, go ahead and have your parts machined out of solid aluminium billet or made in carbon fibre in an autoclave, but this is the affordable solution for most of us. Love it. EDIT: That green is wild! No doubt you'll use black for the real one but I imagine that one lit round outside by LED panels like something from a sci fi movie 😆
G'day mate, I've got 3 105s. 1 daily driver, 1 close 1 refurbed just needs putting together. I'm on the Sunshine Coast. Would love to have a call sometime. Rick
That’s very, very clever. Maybe you could print entire dashs from a good, straight example. One thing I don’t understand, though, is fitting inoperative / dummy parts. If you’re going to fit the radio, why not wire it in? It’s hardly difficult; power, earth, the aerial and a single speaker.
👍 thanks. Radio antenna was taken out as it spoils the cars lines in our opinion. With all the tech nowadays we will leave it to the new owner to decide which way they go😀
Excellent job! Enjoying your vidéos, as they‘re out of the true restoration World … not meant to make things easy … but showing how hard it is to do things right even if using modern technology (e.g. 3D printing the glovebox)
Thank you, we try and keep it real😊
Excellent 👍👍
thanks
Sweet.
Thank you your guys are awesome! Such insight that is thorough and precise. Cheers and keep up the great work.
👍😊
Loving your work! I have 2 GT's that will need new boxes. I only hope that you produce these for sale 🙏
Once we get the final print done and test fitted we will look to make some for sale with flocking in them 😀
3D printing is brilliant. It is turning classic car preservation on its head. If money is no object, go ahead and have your parts machined out of solid aluminium billet or made in carbon fibre in an autoclave, but this is the affordable solution for most of us. Love it.
EDIT: That green is wild! No doubt you'll use black for the real one but I imagine that one lit round outside by LED panels like something from a sci fi movie 😆
🍀, yep wild..tempting as it is ..but we will go black, with black flocking inside
@@AlfaAddicts Chicken! 😀
I jest. You made the correct choice 👍
It’s nice that the missing parts can be created by 3D printer! I must have great possibilities for the classic car enthusiasts!!!
Yes, we think so as well👍😀
Great video. I’d like to flock my stepnose dash top section. Any chance you could share the fixing points? Thanks James
James, Thanks. Can you clarify what you're looking for please?
@@AlfaAddicts the location and number of the dash connection points.
G'day mate, I've got 3 105s. 1 daily driver, 1 close 1 refurbed just needs putting together. I'm on the Sunshine Coast. Would love to have a call sometime.
Rick
Rick, no problem. I drive up to the Sunshine Coast regularly.
Contact me garyclayton01@gmail.com.
That’s very, very clever. Maybe you could print entire dashs from a good, straight example. One thing I don’t understand, though, is fitting inoperative / dummy parts. If you’re going to fit the radio, why not wire it in? It’s hardly difficult; power, earth, the aerial and a single speaker.
👍 thanks. Radio antenna was taken out as it spoils the cars lines in our opinion. With all the tech nowadays we will leave it to the new owner to decide which way they go😀