Bonjour Marie!

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Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Tuesday 19th March
quotequote all
Good evening all,

Say hello to Marie.



A Peugeot 207 CC we have just bought as a ‘family’ car.

My eldest is learning to drive, but I have a Range Rover & my wife has a Mercedes EQC, neither of which are sensible for a learner. So it’s a car anyone in the family can just jump into & drive.

Luckily my nephew’s girlfriend offered this little bijou bundle of fun for 40 purple notes.

It needs some bushes, discs & pads, but honestly looks tidy, is genuinely low mileage & not abused.

The plan is Mrs Stick Legs will own it, I shall maintain it & Stick the younger can use it when not at uni.







I’m actually looking forward to the simple pleasures of shed ownership.

egor110

17,365 posts

210 months

Tuesday 19th March
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Bloody hell i can't believe she's driving already !

Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Tuesday 19th March
quotequote all
egor110 said:
Bloody hell i can't believe she's driving already !
Don’t mate. biglaugh

Time flies.

LunarOne

5,762 posts

144 months

Tuesday 19th March
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A Range Rover AND a French car? Is your best friend a very nice man in a yellow tabard?

Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Tuesday 19th March
quotequote all
LunarOne said:
A Range Rover AND a French car? Is your best friend a very nice man in a yellow tabard?
Actually one of my best mates runs a garage. So not a million miles from the truth. beer

Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Monday 15th July
quotequote all
So Marie was roused from her slumber and dragged over to my mate’s garage.



Where we proceeded to work through the fail sheet:



The calipers were not siezed, in fact they pushed back by hand.



The discs & pads were goosed.



Lots of lovely new parts to go on:



Fiat locking wheel nuts don’t fit Peugeots!



Some people shouldn’t be let near a flat head screwdriver let alone a socket set!!!



All loaded up & ready to head home.



And she passed her MOT this morning so back on the road today.

Edited by Stick Legs on Monday 15th July 11:01

LunarOne

5,762 posts

144 months

Monday 15th July
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Excellent work. The only thing is that Marie's rear wheels are perilously close to the end of the trailer. I just hope you know what you're doing with ratchet straps. But knowing what you do for a living (I'm not a stalker - honest!) I'm sure that if anyone knows how to secure something with a long flexible piece of material, it's you. And I'm doubly sure you uttered something along the lines of "That's not going anywhere" after your work was done. How do I know? All persons of the male persuasion say this when tying down any load to any trailer or roof rack or pallet.

drdino

1,172 posts

149 months

Monday 15th July
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Looks good, what engine does it have?

FYI and if you are not aware of it already, there is a very handy app on the Amazon app store called "FAP" for Android devices that can offer some detailed diagnostics if needed for the major ECUs of PSA cars. As close as you can get to Diagbox on a mobile device.

Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Monday 15th July
quotequote all
drdino said:
Looks good, what engine does it have?

FYI and if you are not aware of it already, there is a very handy app on the Amazon app store called "FAP" for Android devices that can offer some detailed diagnostics if needed for the major ECUs of PSA cars. As close as you can get to Diagbox on a mobile device.
Thanks for that. It’s the 1.6 petrol naturally aspirated so quite fun without being too fast!

Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Monday 15th July
quotequote all
LunarOne said:
Marie's rear wheels are perilously close to the end of the trailer.
Well you wouldn’t want it moving an inch regardless of the length of the trailer.

But yes, the ratchet strap set up was carefully considered. 4 straps. Each running around one wheel with a long lead.
The straps are working against eachother so the car won’t move forward or aft.
The tension on them will prevent sideways movement and the only thing it would be vulnerable to is vertical movement but this should be limited.

The roads across Somerset are quite bumpy but she stayed put.

In an ideal world I’d use a car trailer & wheel straps, but when I can grab an Agri trailer with ramps on demand for free from my FiL’s farm you can’t really complain.

Jhonno

5,940 posts

148 months

Monday 15th July
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LunarOne said:
Excellent work. The only thing is that Marie's rear wheels are perilously close to the end of the trailer. I just hope you know what you're doing with ratchet straps. But knowing what you do for a living (I'm not a stalker - honest!) I'm sure that if anyone knows how to secure something with a long flexible piece of material, it's you. And I'm doubly sure you uttered something along the lines of "That's not going anywhere" after your work was done. How do I know? All persons of the male persuasion say this when tying down any load to any trailer or roof rack or pallet.
Close? If he was intending close, that's an amateur attempt with miles to go..

119

9,619 posts

43 months

Monday 15th July
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Shouldn’t they be tied down from the chassis somewhere to prevent the car bouncing?

Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Tuesday 16th July
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Stick Legs

Original Poster:

5,951 posts

172 months

Tuesday 16th July
quotequote all
[redacted]