Thankfully so far Unicorn ownership has been uneventful (knock on wood). Most of the stuff I've done has been routine maintenance, little cosmetic fixes, and minor mods here and there. I changed the oil, which was the first time I had really been able to get a good look at the bottom of the car since I bought it. I rolled on the hot asphalt when I did my initial inspection but couldn't REALLY see much. The underside of this car is CLEAN. Like I would eat off of it clean.
Only problem I saw was PO has exhaust through the hanger with what looks like an incorrect rubber and it wasn't holding it high enough, so his solution was baling wire. It's held so far so who's to say he was wrong. There seems to be a lot of that on this car. PO bought the nicer parts/accessories/etc but had no clue how to properly install them. Which is great for stuff you can't really screw up, but any time he tried to "fix" something he seems to have made a hash of it. When I bought the car I was under the impression the vent mounted boost gauge was the IPD one they sell since it's an IPD gauge. Not the case. He hole-saw'd the factory vent, then meticulously carved slots into the back of the gauge housing for the vent vanes and reassembled the vent. From the front it looked pretty good minus the little bit of hot glue you could see. I have no idea how he did it, and wouldn't dream of doing it that way. The gauge in that vent is a fairly good spot for the gauge but I didn't really like it. I'm planning to put a new aftermarket head unit in the car so I figured use that spot for the gauge as well. I sprung for the expensive Volvo double din panel because I read the aftermarket ones don't fit well. Now time to cut a hole in my 130$ piece of plastic...
used the boost gauge bezel as a guide (in this picture you can see the slots he cut for the vent vanes). Then using an undersized holesaw I cut the hole, and then chased it bigger with the dremel tool... It could have gone better. Apparently I'm not great at freehanding a circle.
After my "circle" was cut out I test fit the gauge a bezel, I knew I could hide this crime as long as I didn't go too crazy, so there was lots of little bits of grinding and fit-checking.
Pretty pleased with the finished product. I then super-glued the bezel in place, which was a mistake. Little bits of glue seeped out and then dried white, and I couldn't quite get it completely flush with the slightly curved face. I'll probably come back with some acetone and try to clean it up. Good news is the whole thing needs to get painted, because despite being a Volvo part, the color doesn't actually match the factory plastic. To fit a double din those little ridges also had to be ground down and I had to track down a mounting bracket because the new head-unit didn't come with one.
I removed the factory radio to check out the wiring situation and realized this radio upgrade will also be a performance upgrade. The factory radio must weigh 10lbs. The bracket that holds it is thick cast aluminum and looks like it could survive a direct missile strike.
The A-pillar on the driver's side was also delaminating so I popped it out (which you can do without pulling the dash, which is awesome), cleaned it up and re-glued it.
Coming apart.
Fixed and reinstalled. At some point I want to convert the car to an all black interior, including the headliner (which I don't even know was an option from the factory) so it's good to know the A-pillar trim will be easy at least.
I've had issues with the hatch since the day I bought the car. PO replaced the hatch that was damaged with a non-R hatch (so no rear spoiler: BOO) and didn't have the body repaired, so the alignment of the hatch is jacked up.... and he tried to repaint it and did about the job you'd expect from a spray can from someone who has no idea what they're doing. It's like a 100' paint job. All of this could be overlooked in the short term if I could open the hatch. Which I couldn't, at least not reliably. Oh and the battery is under the floor in the hatch. So that needed to get fixed. I had to crawl into the back, pull off the interior trim, and manually open the latch from the mechanism with a screwdriver. Basically as soon I removed the interior trim the mechanism basically threw one of the actuator rods at me. There's yer problem. Reattached the rod and added a drop of epoxy where it had pulled out of it's plastic pressing and the hatch now opens and closes properly. During this process I noticed the hatch's electric lock solenoid wasn't plugged in... which explains why when I lock the car the tail lights didn't flash. PO had also cut all the loom routing zip-tie clips instead of shimming them so they could be reused; which I suppose if you're not around a lot of zip-ties would be all he knew to do. Fixed all of that, ran new zip-ties through the body of the old clips and secured the harness in place, connected the lock solenoid, and verified it worked. I also think that solenoid detects whether the hatch is closed or not, or that plug is shared with the sensor cause that fixed my "Hatch Open" message too. Fun fact, V70 hatches are made entirely of plastic. I at least expected a steel exterior panel like a door skin, but as far as I can tell the whole thing is plastic. Extra lightness I guess.
When things calm down around the house (I'm rebuilding our porch) I'm gonna get a quote from a body shop to just fix the sheet metal and mounting points in that back corner. If they come back with something nuts I've got a stud gun... I may try and yank it out myself. I'm already trying to track down a local proper hatch with a spoiler cause that's like 50% of the coolness of the R.