Street Machine Australia - May 2018

(Chris Devlin) #1
BLOWIN’ GASKETS
STORY GLENN TORRENS

S


O, I’VE been bangin’ around in a
Toyota HiLux 4WD for six years.
Good rig, but I was over it. I’ve got
me a little fast Vee-Dub for a bit
of weekend track fun, but driving the lifted,
knobby-tyred HiLux anywhere apart from
over the Snowies or across the Simpson was
giving me the craps, especially as before the
’Lux I’d had a 15-year run of V8 dailies, with a
VP Calais and then a VT Senator.
And in mid-2016 I’d bought an ’89 VN V8
Calais as a collector/cruise car. But I was soon
sneaking to the shops or the pub or the post
office or wherever in the Calais rather than
the HiLux, enjoying the high from its hits-from-
the-bong injected V8 torque almost every day.
Oh yeah.
But that’s not why I bought it; it was because

this lovely original two-owner VN had only just
clicked 100,000km and would be H-plate-
eligible in NSW in 2019. And there I was, with
the car on full thousand-dollar rego, running
1500km in a weekend sometimes, and risking
it with moron mums in school-zone traffic. It
had to stop.
So when brother-man and fellow Street
Machine contributor Dave Morley mentioned


  • over a couple of pots, of course – a dead
    Commodore V8 wagon he knew of, I was all
    ears. It sounded like a set-up, too good to be
    true (and knowing Morley’s larrikin humour, it
    could have been!), but nah, he assured it me
    was legit. No kiddin’.
    The story was, the previous owner was fully
    Facebook-qualified so had whipped off the
    intake, fuel rails and one head to install a lumpy


cam before realising: ‘Oh jeez.’ Eventually,
even his mum wanted it gone. Morley’s mate
Bondini was right place, right time to collect
it for next-to-nothing. But then Bondini had
got busy.
Parked under gum trees and covered in shit,
it was a 2002 VXII Berlina. As well as the
orange hue of cylinder rust, it had rat poo on
the pistons. But everything else was there,
including a battery that had just enough mojo
to light up the instruments and reveal just over
240,000km – a bit of life remaining. Morley
organised a tow to his place and it sat there for
a few weeks until I could drive back to Melburg
with a toolbox.
I began by soaking the open bores with Inox
and scrubbing off the fuzz with 600-grade
abrasive paper. Then, by hand-turning the

BACK ON THE WAGON



GLENN TORRENS WAS TIRED OF THE ’LUX LIFE AND WANTED A LOAD-CARRIER WITH A BIT MORE



SPRING IN ITS STEP


140140 STREET MACHINE STREET MACHINE

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