16-01-2018, 01:02 AM
(11-01-2018, 03:30 PM)Mike Costigan Wrote:(11-01-2018, 11:00 AM)JonE Wrote: That's good to know the early shorter rad shell finishes when the magneto finishes...
Well, almost! In fact the raised nickel-plated shells were introduced in August 1928 at A6-9330 (chassis 67024), the first coil engine was fitted to A7-1280 (68814, engine 69000) and not standardised until A7-1569 (69135). The RK (wide-door saloon style) was not standardised until A7-6400, so there were both mag-engined and coil-engined R saloons with the larger radiator.
Bill Sheehan has asked me to post this reply-
Jon - There is a difference between the 28/29 radiator shell and those fitted to Nippys, albeit not a lot. The neck orifice is larger; the bottom front face does not have the two-bolts protruding (although there were a few Ulsters with the later no-bolt version); only one of the external holes on the shell lower sides agrees with the mounting holes on the earlier shells & it is not slotted; the steel reinforcing internal brackets are longer and the channels are shaped differently; the two mounting brackets for the tank base are entirely different. Also you mentioned scanning factory drawings, but I feel you place too much reliance on their accuracy - they don't always agree with what metal the factory produces. Re your striving for a horizontal line - on bonnet drawings they may look level with the ground, but every Seven I've worked on had a rise of at least 1/4" from front to rear on the bonnets. I've checked with 3 owners of 65/Nippys and they agree that theirs have a rise of 1/4". A small difference such as that would hardly show on a small drawing. Hope this helps. Bill Sheehan