gazza285
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posted on 29/7/06 at 04:27 PM |
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Cortina upright weight
Tried a search, but came up blank.
What is the weight of a built Cortina upright i.e. with hubs, discs bearings, calipers and dust plate?
Thanks.
DO NOT PUT ON KNOB OR BOLLOCKS!
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Danozeman
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posted on 29/7/06 at 05:57 PM |
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Heavy. But iirc lighter than sierra ones. This has been talked about before.
Dan
Built the purple peril!! Let the modifications begin!!
http://www.eastangliankitcars.co.uk
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gazza285
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posted on 29/7/06 at 06:05 PM |
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I'm not after comparisons, I just want the weight please.
DO NOT PUT ON KNOB OR BOLLOCKS!
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gazza285
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posted on 29/7/06 at 06:07 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by Danozeman
This has been talked about before.
Could not find a post with the actual weight mentioned though.........
DO NOT PUT ON KNOB OR BOLLOCKS!
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ch1ll1
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posted on 29/7/06 at 06:21 PM |
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twice as much as half of it ! ( joke)
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leto
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posted on 29/7/06 at 07:06 PM |
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As i happen to have one of each laying around in my living room. (Yes I am single, how did you know?) On my bathroom scale, uprights without disk and
calipers:
Cortina 6kg
Sierra 5,5kg
“I'm gonna ride around in style
I'm gonna drive everybody wild
'Cause I'll have the only one there is a round”. (J. Cash)
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indykid
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posted on 29/7/06 at 08:42 PM |
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all up, cortina was about 15kg, sierra about 16
tom
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cidersurfer
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posted on 29/7/06 at 09:44 PM |
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Can't be sure that's the answer is there but Fluke have a weight database.
http://www.fluke-motorsport.
co.uk
shimming solid lifters is a job for a friend...
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RichieW
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posted on 30/7/06 at 09:01 AM |
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Just weighed the gear on the bathroom scales this morning. Everything bar the pair of caliper fixing bolts which are in a box somewhere and that
backplate thing which I chucked out ages ago. The scales said 14kg.
That was with a solid cortina disc. Bearing grease, grease caps, pads etc. Its all assembled apart from bolting the caliper to the upright. The
missing bits can only weigh a few ounces if that.
The scales are electronic and fairly new but I cant vouch for any accuracy of them. I guess the fifteen kilo figure mentioned before is probably
correct.
[Edited on 31/7/06 by RichieW]
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gazza285
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posted on 30/7/06 at 06:36 PM |
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Thanks.
DO NOT PUT ON KNOB OR BOLLOCKS!
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indykid
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posted on 31/7/06 at 10:55 AM |
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i'd go with your 14kg, tbh. i used a scabby old set of analogue scales. the reading is repeatable, but that says nothing about the accuracy.
there's still not a lot between the 2 setups weightwise anyway.
at least we're in the same ballpark
tom
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NS Dev
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posted on 31/7/06 at 12:41 PM |
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anybody got the weight of the caliper alone then?
From my "feelometer" the caliper seems to be the heavy bit (I'm not using them for that reason)
Retro RWD is the way forward...........automotive fabrication, car restoration, sheetmetal work, engine conversion
retro car restoration and tuning
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RichieW
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posted on 31/7/06 at 06:49 PM |
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One newly reconditioned M16 caliper with new pads, shims, springs and a little rubber cap on the bleed nipple came in at 4.4kg.
Couldn't get the scales to repeat the measurement as it kept saying "ERR" as its probably about as low a weight the scales will
measure. I put the other caliper on the scales and the two came in at 8.7kg
Think the 4.35kg figure will be probably the more accurate of the two measurements. Either way, bloody heavy.
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brynhamlet
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posted on 31/7/06 at 08:07 PM |
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Hey ho Danozeman
Have you still got that box you collected from me. Pinch your wives scales and weigh the bits.
We are all curious!!!
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NS Dev
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posted on 1/8/06 at 11:57 AM |
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ahh, cheers folks, good to know the raceleda calipers have saved a bit then.
1.47kg each vs 4.35kg each for the 'tina ones.
Retro RWD is the way forward...........automotive fabrication, car restoration, sheetmetal work, engine conversion
retro car restoration and tuning
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