I accomplished quite a bit in the last week or so. I was able to get the safety harness mounted--a silver Stroud 7-point unit. I used the clip-in attachments for the lap belts, anti-submarine, and center belt. The shoulder belts just wrap around the harness bar (that's what it's for, after all!). Installing the eye bolts for the harness was a bit of a challenge. Two of them just screwed into existing holes that were secure in the car. The other three had to be drilled, and I have those giant washers on their undersides to prevent pull-through in an accident.
I put the seat in afterwards for a bit and got everything lined up, ran the belts, adjusted their lengths, and lamented getting pull-down lap belts. Picking a harness is hard, if you've never done it before, and there isn't a lot of guidance available to help you even ask the right questions unless you know people. (It's hard to search for or ask on a forum if you don't know to ask in the first place!) It's good though--I am able to adjust the lap belts sufficiently because I have enough elbow room in the car for it. I might call Stroud and ask if I can swap belts though.
Hey, I like your shoes. I have the same ones! I liked the styling of them, and they're surprisingly-light! I like the dark color on mine because it doesn't show dirt as easily as white. High five for good style!
I also decided that I wanted to get the window net mounted. I tacked the front buckle onto the cage and fastened the rod onto it. When I clamp the rear part of the rod where it passes over the mounting point I've chosen, it looks like it lines up perfectly! I ordered a female-threaded heim joint online after visiting every hardware store in town in search for one. I'll mount the joint, measure and cut the rod, then drill out the threads in the heim joint. I think I want to slide the rod into it, and then secure it simply with a hair pin or cotter pin--that way the whole thing can be dropped quickly to allow for emergency egress or, more likely, routine maintenance. A little addendum to this section: I got the inside net mostly figured out too. I just need to tighten the straps on it, once the seat is in and it'll be done.
I got those rear bars made and welded in, too. I wanted something to join the bottoms of the rear main tubes to the bottom of the main hoop. It looks cooler, but I also think they add to the torsional rigidity significantly. Plus, they were fun to make. The bars were straight, but the copes were at different angles with respect to their joining tubes. They also needed to be clocked by, I think, about 10 degrees axially to each other. The first one went on perfectly, but I made a mistake and left the hole saw adjusted for the wrong cut and ended up with a too-short passenger side bar. It still fit, after recoping, but it wasn't even with the other, so I remade it. Now the cage looks like what I wanted, so I'm finished with making tubes!
A while back, I cut out a taco gusset. A 100-thou-thick plate. It was a crude first attempt, and it's not perfectly square, so the plan was simply to remake it. But in the meantime, I thought I'd try to smash this one over and get it into shape (like a taco shell, if that's not obvious), just to see how that all worked. I heated it up, put it in my vice, and beat the piss out of it for a while until... hey, it actually looks taco-like. I pulled it out, and smushed it with the vice a bit to get it more in-shape. Stuck it in the car and.... woah... it looks great! So, to fix the non-squareness, I just cut some of the excess off and as far as I can tell, it was a perfect fit. I just welded it in there. Good enough!
Wiring? Yeah. Lots of wiring. I found the amplifier and radio antenna wires. There's a Y shaped set of wires that follows the center console, then splits under the rear seat, heads over to the door arches, and then goes up and over the wheel wells into the trunk. The driver's side wires go to the antenna tuner. The passenger side goes to the amp and sub. Well... they did. Now they're yanked out and sitting on my garage floor. There are no longer any wires going down the center console. I haven't cut them, but I will follow them as far as I can and try to depin them or unplug them from the car. They probably terminate inside some of the stereo connectors that are just... chilling there... so they might not even be plugged in anywhere. The wires are surprisingly heavy, so removing them will help in the overall mission. Scope creep, though! This is stage 2 stuff--for after the first racing season... why am I doing it now!
Gee whiz, what else? I'm trying to get the car set up to be safe for an HPDE in a little under two weeks. Part of that is getting the windshield removed this coming Friday, making and installing gussets for the windshield frame, and having the new windshield installed a little later. I would love to get some of the black schmoo off of the floor, but that's probably a future-me problem.
Oh! The brakes! I ruined those godforsaken rear calipers finally! Last brake change, I couldn't get the pistons to spin in. This isn't my first rodeo with rotate-in rear pistons--my Viper had them--but the Viper was easy to work on, and so the brakes were smooth. The A4? Well, early this year, the only way I could get them back in was to extend them all the way out, until after they popped off of whatever they thread onto, and then thread them back on. The seal, the piston, and everything looked clean and fresh--no idea why it was like this, but after doing that to BOTH calipers, the process was smooth. Well, it happened again this weekend. They wouldn't screw in, and I'm using the tool that was made for this. So I popped the driver side out first and..... ruined it. I got the piston back in, but it's sucking air now. The brakes are totally shot. So I just ordered new ones. I'm putting EBC Bluestuff NDX pads on there, so these will hold up nicely at the track.
Fun fact: EBC makes Bluestuff NDX pads for the front calipers of our cars now! The only place I saw that had them was ECS Tuning. I went ahead and ordered them. Bluestuff all around this time. I had Yellowstuff pads on there before, and they worked extremely well, but having a higher temperature tolerance won't hurt me!
Things to do in the coming weeks:
Install the Summit Racing heater - I need a pair of hose barbs to reduce the size from whatever Audi uses for heater hoses down to 5/8" to plug into the heater core in the Summit Racing heater. Doing this will also allow me to extend the hoses a bit to make them reach the heater. Should be a couple hours of work--it doesn't have to work right now, electrically--it just has to seal up.
Pull windshield, install gussets, paint that part of the cage real quick, have the new windshield installed. Safelite repair, Safelite to race... isn't that the jingle?
Clip the belts back in and reinstall the seat.
Replace front pads, rear calipers and pads, and bleed brakes.
Oh, the doors. Always forgetting about the doors. Gotta bolt those guys on. Maybe I'll gut them, too.
It's not done, but it's passable for now, and I think it should be fine for an HPDE. A couple of these tasks are routine maintenance tasks, and so they should be manageable. Oil and coolant are good (and full), and I refuse to touch them now.
Enjoy a few pictures! (If they ever display...)