Ray Bell
Well-known member
Wow!
Thanks Bob...
Thanks Bob...
Welcome Ray! The key thing to flag is that Gregor is a professional photographer, so sometimes the picture is just about something that looks striking, like a bright blue car in a tunnel, as opposed to being about the tunnel itself.I'm really glad you're having fun, but I'm perplexed...
I don't understand what the picture above is all about.
Gregor, siping a tire is new to me. When we were competing in autocross the in thing was shaving tires. When you locked up the brakes or spun out and flat-spotted the tires, you could have the tires shaved to match the depth of the flat spot. Although tire shaving is less common now, it can save money if you damage one tire on your all-wheel-drive vehicle. As I understand it, AWD tries to keep all four wheels rotating at the same speed so it's best to replace all four tires at the same time. To maintain the same diameter, a single new tire can be shaved to match the diameter of the three worn tires.I needed new tires either way so I went with Continentals and had them siped. That's the process, controversial as I've discovered, that makes tiny cuts across the blocks. Not sure if it's a mistake or not but it's supposed to aid in wet grip and snow grip.
I'm really glad you're having fun, but I'm perplexed...
I don't understand what the picture above is all about. A tunnel? If so, of what?
Love your pics, by the way.


That is one of my most favorite cars from when I was a kid. My mom had a 1976 Toyota lift back and thought the volvo was that car on steroids. They used to run slalom events in the parking lot at our local mall on Sundays back then and we used to ride down on our bikes to watch all the cool cars taking there turn on the course.
Gregor, siping a tire is new to me. When we were competing in autocross the in thing was shaving tires. When you locked up the brakes or spun out and flat-spotted the tires, you could have the tires shaved to match the depth of the flat spot. Although tire shaving is less common now, it can save money if you damage one tire on your all-wheel-drive vehicle. As I understand it, AWD tries to keep all four wheels rotating at the same speed so it's best to replace all four tires at the same time. To maintain the same diameter, a single new tire can be shaved to match the diameter of the three worn tires.










Part of it is I would like to have a vehicle with some modern creature comforts. Car technology has come a long way since 06 lol.One of my Foresters has 455,000kms on the clock...

















Those blue-tint bulbs look cool, but are they really the best choice? Dan Stern seems to think the French were on to something with their "Selective Yellow" headlights of yesteryear. One can even roll your own yellow bulbs by coating clear bulbs with Dupli-Color Metalcast Yellow according to him. See Selective Yellow Light for details.Next thing was lights. Stock headlights are pretty good but I was told that bulb upgrades were the best option.
Gregor
Those blue-tint bulbs look cool, but are they really the best choice? Dan Stern seems to think the French were on to something with their "Selective Yellow" headlights of yesteryear. One can even roll your own yellow bulbs by coating clear bulbs with Dupli-Color Metalcast Yellow according to him. See Selective Yellow Light for details.
Seems like a perfect Gregor project, somehow.
This last photo is really incredible, you could see it upside down and you would be seeing it exactly the same as the right side.









I've got Morimoto H-7 LEDs on my Burgman, which takes conventional H-7 bulbs. They were pricey, but kick *** compared to high end halogens. Everything lines up correctly on the road.I did and the consensus was that they don't work with the reflectors that are designed for halogen. I'd still consider trying them if I found a decent set.
Gregor
Soon you will be spending time studying the SCCA rule book. Adding any parts may bump you up classes where the car will not be competitive with full blown autocross cars.There’s a guy racing his wagon in California and he took off the Ohlins and replaced it with a set of KW V3’s because they had ride height adjustment. I just missed buying them for next to nothing.
Wow. This goes to show how effective a good photographer can really be. I wouldn't think twice about this tunnel, but Gregor makes it look like something from another planet.Gregor, I looked up that tunnel on Street View...
I can see that it is really pretty ordinary, but imagination and lighting can do things to the ordinary as we all know. It's not of the usual type of construction, I feel, looking like formwork was thrown up with boards on the inside and undoubtedly the outside as well, except, of course, for the top. The tunnel was then cast in situ.
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I miss PIR. I guess its been almost 3 years since I've been there. Man!... time flies!







Hey everyone. I just returned from visiting Gregor in June of 2025. I thought I'd share this video of him playing guitar with you allSo I bought a guitar back in November. My friend Saul Koll (you've seen him on the thread here) makes amazing electric guitars and has a two year wait list and **** it. In two years I may not be good but I'll be better. And I'll enjoy that process. Well, not the first month or so - my fingers hurt like hell. I still **** but that's okay. I'm getting better.
Gregor
Gregor,Depression is a sneaky thing - you often don't even know you're depressed and it's like a blanket that covers you and stops light, sound and joy from getting in.
That's it! I'm selling my Strat. At this stage, who am I kidding.Hey everyone. I just returned from visiting Gregor in June of 2025. I thought I'd share this video of him playing guitar with you all

Man I was just thinking of the exact same idea a few days ago! My 3rd gen 4Runner has the same challenge of lack of space on dash to mount a phone for navigation. I also have tried the windshield mount and for a phone it works but doesn't look very good. I was thinking same thing, use the passenger seat inner mount point as a location for something like this. Fabulous execution! I like it.Since the separation I've been on an up and down journey trying to find some balance and for a lot of reasons, mostly work related but also social, I've not had much time in the shop. By much time I mean basically any time.
I never wanted a car as a hobby mostly because of the expense but also the space constraints. But last week I found a way to bridge that with a small project that got me back into the shop. In fact I probably could have figured out a way to do this without the shop but I wanted a small, get back on the horse, sort of project.
I love the dash and layout of the Volvo, and as was mentioned above, cars have come a long with with technology and that was a big part of what I wanted with this car - to enter the 21st century. The trouble that I found on my trip with the car was that there's not much space in the cockpit so to speak.
I tried mounting my phone via the Quadlock suction mount in at least a dozen places on the windshield during the trip from Boston. It was either visible and in the way of seeing the road or distracting. I tried the side windows, the sunroof, in the cup holder. The dash doesn't have many blank areas and I didn't like the idea of blocking a vent, screen or buttons.
Around this time I discovered that the Valentine radar detector that I've owned for maybe 20 years had an update that included bluetooth and that there were a world of apps that combined detectors, crowd sourced warnings, traffic camera maps and even police airplane warnings. Technology really went all in on trying to avoid tickets and the very best app, by a long way, is JBV1 which is, sadly, only available on Android. Then I remembered I have an Android tablet on the KTM 890.
This mount was given to me by Tripltek to test out after I'd asked them to make a better mounting solution. I never got the chance to use it because my mount was already built on the KTM and I didn't have the time or energy to remake that. But now it has a second life as it's designed to work with Ram mounts.
And I have a lot of those in my collection. The trouble was that there was no dash space to fix a mount. I wanted to keep the tablet low and near the rest of the controls - it's too big to put up in the windscreen area.
The only place that made any sense was to utilize a seat rail bolt and build something that tucked in near the center console.
I worked up a sketch of a simple mount that would use the rail and an arm.
It needed to bend a tiny amount and it seemed like overkill to use the bender but since I had 1/2" tube it made sense to do that.
and just a tiny kink in the tube and then a piece of bar stock...
And then all that was needed was to prep and weld after fitting the parts. I added a small brace to try to give the arm a bit less flex.
Painted and mounted the height can be varied by choosing different Ram arms and positions. I had to extend the bottom forward to make sure I could run the seat all the way forward but it all clears.
Around the same time I found the OBD2 dongle that I bought for the KTM but never got to work...
But it works fine with the tablet and the Volvo and it also communicates with JBV1 to calculate fuel ranges, speeds, milages and the like.
I'm sure there's more options with it but the tablet is starting to replace the phone for a lot of things and having two devices would seem to be complicated but the phone connects via Bluetooth to the car and soon I'll install an audio unit that will add CarPlay to the Volvo computer and then the phone can handle music and mapping and the tablet can take car of overall mapping, radar integration and more car type functions with the OBD.
I'm sure I'll figure that out as I find which one does what best but right now the size of the tablet and the location seem pretty ideal and it's easy to touch and input with your hand resting naturally where it would for the shifter and it doesn't interfere with my passenger.
So, one small step back to the shop. I'm spring cleaning, both the house, the shop and my life right now.
Gregor