Haven't fallen off the planet (feels like it though these last few weeks).
I undertook refreshing the steering wheel column a few weeks ago. I cleaned out the old bearings and they felt "OKAY" after repacking. But really, I figured, "I'm already down this far, I may as well just go the full run." Hopped on Ebay and hunted down bearings.
Bearings came for the steering wheel column. Turns out they are a standard NGK bearing 16004. Not expensive (unless you order from a dealer at $30/ea, or $6.95 for NOS on ebay). The issue I'm running into is that there is some corrosion on the turn signal stalk, so I'm trying to clean that off without being intrusive. The stalk is NLA from Lamborghini and I have called 3 dealers, no one has them in stock, and no one can get them. The switches in the dash all look good and I'm cleaning those up while I'm at it. Believe it or not, most of them pop apart with a simple tiny pick and something small like an eye glasses screwdriver. The innards are just dirty.
The coating on the steering column is flaking off. I'm not sure if it's actually factory, or if someone painted it at some point in time. I'm toying with the idea of getting the outside of mine powdercoated. I'd like to know what the finish is like on other Jalpas, I put the feelers out to a few other Jalpa owners to see if someone could shoot me a photo of theirs.
The dash is completely disassembled so I can clean everything up. It had to come out to get to the front portion of the wiring harness, so I figured, "Eh, while I'm down there I may as well." Pretty sure I have the cleanest Jalpa dash around at the moment.
The only "dirty" part is the factory glue on the back from the leather work (can sort of see that in the picture)
The rest of the disassembled dash, also cleaned next to it.
Time to detail the heater vents, re-assemble, and I'll have a new looking dash. Nothing like italian leather, it's gorgeous.
Sometime this week I will likely be making a road trip to Portland to get the heads dropped off for final repairs and then hopefully I can FINALLY get the rest of this engine built. As things get detailed and refinished, the car is finally starting to feel more and more like progress. I suppose restoring a car like this is certainly not an overnight adventure. Hard to be patient sometimes, but seeing progress feels good, and makes it feel like a successful venture.
Also, I got the headlights up so I can remove them (only way I can see to get to the wiring harness up there). Probably the first time the lights have seen the light of day in ages.