Nd4SpSe
Adventurer, eh?
Once back from Mosport and feeling a bit better, I put the truck to the side to work on the Mazda2. The spare tire well has rusted away. I had gotten a clean one from a friend who had gotten t-boned in his early in the year and the trunk was mint. I wanted to get this done before it was unmanagable and lose the spare tire. At the same time gotten a UK rear bumper an an additonal light from Portugal to do rear fog lights. I had done a rear foglight on my MX-3 back in the day and the idea came back into mind during a severe daytime snow storm we had this winter. While I was in the truck during it, it was a reminder that being seen in those conditions are important and running lights during the day are almost useless when visibility is that poor. I had passed an Audi that had theirs on and I could see them much better the further then anyone else. When driving a small tin can surrounded by trucks and SUVs, being seen I figured is a damn good thing to avoid being squished. I had subsequently turned on my rear signal bar to solid orange to improve the visibility of myself, especially since my tail lights were easilly being covered by snow and literally cleaned them off evertime I stopped; the one downside to LED bulbs is the lack of heat they generate.
This also required modifications to the rear rebar so I made my own 1-1/4" trailer reciever along with a 4-pin trailer wiring adapter. it was a set summer and wold ran on and off randomly. I would be sunny and I'd have my head in the trunk to feel rain drops on my lower back. I`d drag in the welder and wait it out. It did however met me check for water inlfiltration points. I sealed everything that was body seams, bolts and gromets to see if I could stop water from coming in and pooling in the trunk. I then painted over all the seam sealer as I didn't notice I got the white one until I opened the tube. A Note from today is that I checked early this year there is still water coming in from somewhere but looks to be very minor, but the idea that it`s still getting in from somewhere bothers me.
As working on the Mazda2 was weather dependant I'd work on the brushguard modifications in the garage while it rained. Once the Mazda2 was done I could pull the truck around and work on the mounting and fitament. It still needs some work, especially the lower section as it affects my approache angle. I also I need to figure out how to remove the rubber as I'd like to get it powder coated once it's finalized. I love the look, especially from the front, but at this point something seemed off with how the truck looks.
This also required modifications to the rear rebar so I made my own 1-1/4" trailer reciever along with a 4-pin trailer wiring adapter. it was a set summer and wold ran on and off randomly. I would be sunny and I'd have my head in the trunk to feel rain drops on my lower back. I`d drag in the welder and wait it out. It did however met me check for water inlfiltration points. I sealed everything that was body seams, bolts and gromets to see if I could stop water from coming in and pooling in the trunk. I then painted over all the seam sealer as I didn't notice I got the white one until I opened the tube. A Note from today is that I checked early this year there is still water coming in from somewhere but looks to be very minor, but the idea that it`s still getting in from somewhere bothers me.
As working on the Mazda2 was weather dependant I'd work on the brushguard modifications in the garage while it rained. Once the Mazda2 was done I could pull the truck around and work on the mounting and fitament. It still needs some work, especially the lower section as it affects my approache angle. I also I need to figure out how to remove the rubber as I'd like to get it powder coated once it's finalized. I love the look, especially from the front, but at this point something seemed off with how the truck looks.