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graphic with lotus europa and lotus elan

David A's Europa

Europa Tools

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Zetec Bolt Tighten Tool

This is simply a degree wheel (easy to keep stationary) and a short 1/2 inch drive extension. This makes it very easy to follow the Ford advice to "then turn 60 degrees" in the engine assembly instructions.

picture of bolt tightening tool

Zetec Cam Measurement Tools

Doesn't look like a tool does it? This simple flat plate screws to the head over cylinders one and two. It provides a stable base for a magnetic-base for a dial indicator. The dial indicator needs a very thin feeler as the cams come very close to the head. Unlike the Lotus TwinCam there is not much room for the feeler to reach the tappet to analyze cam timing...

picture of cam measurement base

Zetec Piston/Crank Position Tool

This is a stock Zetec tool set. For example, Snap-On tools parts 303-574 and 303-465. The knurled rod screws into the block (lower left facing block from the rear) in (temporary) place of a short dummy screw. If you screw it in when near TDC (looking at piston top through spark plug hole) then when the crank stops you will be exactly at TDC. Well, very very close. See below for a tool to help check correctness. With the crank at TDC turn the cams so the rear slots line up and insert the bar (the bar will just clear the head). Even with aftermarket/reground cams the positioning will be very close to right so these tools really help.

picture of cam positioning tool

Zetec Piston/Cranks Position Checking tool

If you want to find TDC to verify the official tool 'gets it right' you need to use something to help you. This is a bit of steel welded to the remains of a spark plug. The rod fits inside and the step on the rod means the rod won't fall too much past the spark plug. It won't fall into the cylinder more than you need to find TDC. You stick a dial indicator in the small alloy piece at left, it has a central hole to fit the dial indicator. The screws hold things together. The obvious general plan: read the crank position off a degree wheel at some dial-indicator-measured distance from TDC on both sides of TDC. Half way between those wheel positions is TDC.

picture of crank position tool

Zetec Crank Position Sense Tool

To get the crank sensor depth right so it can work with your ECU (precision placement is required) you need to measure the distance from the mount point to the flywheel fingers. The following picture shows a bit of 1/2 inch diameter aluminum rod (scrap rod) with a two-piece clamp-on shaft collar. With the collar loose, slip the rod into the sensor holder till it touches a finger. Tighten the collar while holding the collar against the sensor holder. Now remove the tool and accurately measure the needed depth. I had to lightly file a few thousandths off the plastic self of a sensor to get it into the specified gap (sensor to flywheel finger) range.

picture of crank sense tool

Zetec Cam Pulley Tool

Zetec cam wheels (stock ones, as pictured here) have no positive lock with the cam. Friction holds it together. So to tighten or loosen the fixing bolt one needs a holder. I built this simple tool to do the job, and it does so nicely. I actually use Kent Cams adjustable cam wheels which have a positive locator on the Kent Cams, but the tool works fine on them too. A good reason to use such a tool is it keeps the Torx T-55 drive bit straight while loosening or tightening. Failing to keep the bit straight results in damage to the special pulley attachment bolt and the bit (you are wondering how I know?).

picture of cam pulley tool

Rear Window Tool

The europa rear window uses a sealing/install that is quite like the Elan windshield: a long piece of shaped rubber that grips the glass on one side, the fiberglass on the other, and a final strip of thin material that helps keep it all together. The rubber bits look like this. picture of rubber samples It's also complicated on the Europa by the need to have the interior upholstery and the strip providing an air gap for the air exhaust over the rear windows both trapped *under* the rubber. The install of the initial larger rubber is not too hard, but you really need two people to do it, as the window is long and nothing stays in place by itself till it's all done... The final small (triangular) strip then must be inserted into the larger rubber to trap things. For this a windshield installation tool from www.frost.co.uk (product code S135) comes in very handy indeed. picture of window install tool The trick here is to realize that the entire diamond shaped wire bit goes into (spreads) the tiny slot. So even though the tiny rubber (which must have its 'pointy end' pointing into the larger rubber) comes in after the diamond passes, it was spread so wide that the small rubber fits. I'll bet that makes no sense to you. It does take some force and some soapy water, but it goes very fast. Because one cannot reach the tool into the tight corners very well (unlike the Elan windshield) due to the body interfering, a small tool like a screwdriver may be used to tuck in any final edges of the tiny rubber strip. I spent hours by myself on the small strip to no avail before I had the tool (maybe got 25 percent done, and was getting no further). With a second person and the tool it was all done in an hour.

Door Windows Rivet Tool

There are 4 rivets helping hold the window frames to the door fiberglass. Under the rubber/fabric in the channel. A standard pop-rivet gun can't reach into the channel to properly rivet the frames back in. So I made the following little adapter from a bit of steel rod I had laying about. The threads I simply cut with a standard die (I did not thread on the lathe, just cut the basic shape there). Having cut the thru hole and threads and machined the long neck I simply cut it off the steel rod and was done. Almost.

Photo of pop-riveter extension

The ruler alongside the part for comparison is measured in inches. It replaces the standard extension and is thin enough to reach into the channel easily. After making it I realized I needed a little nub so that on opening the pop rivet gun the rivet nail would free up. So as an afterthought I brazed (welded) on a bit of brass alloy under the threads.

Wheel Centering Tool

The wheels were difficult to center using the factory wheel nuts. So I made tools pictured here. I use these two to get the wheels located then snug up the wheel using two factory nuts then remove the tools and do the other two wheel nuts. Of course now I'm using Panasports with conical steel nuts and conical steel seats on the wheel, so these wheel center tools are no longer of too much use.

wheel centering tool

It was not too much help with the Brand Lotus wheels. The Compomotive wheels seem to be better made though. There is still radial runout at the rear due to the marginal factory hub-spline design. No, there is no 'taper' in the wheel holes, but a hand snugging of the tools requires no taper.

Balancing small parts

This simple scale is really handy for tasks line ensuring a few parts weigh the same.

picture of a balance-type scale

Rear Hub Puller for standard Europa hubs

Another handy tool (purchased, not made by me) is a hubpuller. Here's one set up to be used. I think I got it from Harbor Freight.

picture of hub puller wheel

Degree Wheel for Zetec

Naturally one has to have a degree wheel to time the cams. Once the engine was in the car I wanted to retime the cams (to check something) and had to figure out how. The first picture is a standard plastic degree wheel but with the center cut out and magnets sitting on it.

picture of degree wheel

The second picture shows the point of the cutout. It matches the inside diameter of the Zetec harmonic balancer/front pulley and the magnets hold it quite firmly to the balancer. There is plenty of room for a socket on the crankshaft nut. Three refrigerator magnets were sacrificed in this creation of the tool :-) The fuzzy black line through the picture is the alternator belt obstructing the picture.

picture of degree wheel

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