[DeTomaso] Preparing a car for long term storage
Pantdino
pantdino at aol.com
Fri Jun 15 13:02:15 EDT 2018
Hi Charlie,
I might be mistaken, but I think of Spain as having a climate similar to Los Angeles, where moisture is a non-issue. As for rodents, you will know if they are a problem or not.
Personally I have never had a problem with the breathable car covers collecting moisture beneath them.
I like the idea of an empty carb. You could just let the fuel pump pump into a gas can then pour it into the tank.
I think the gas in the tank is a quandry. If you leave the tank full you will come back to 16 gallons of 2 year old fuel. What will you do with it?
But if you leave the tank empty you might get corrosion in the tank. But your climate is dry, so probably not a concern.
I would probably put the car up with blocks under the suspension just high enough to get the tires off the ground. Or you could just take the wheels off. (?)
Sent from AOL Mobile Mail
On Friday, June 15, 2018, Larry-Ohio Time Corp <Larry at ohiotimecorp.com> wrote:
Hi Charlie,
I do things a bit differantly then most...no big surprise to anyone!
For long term storage I do not like anything touching the car body,
like car covers, plastic, anything. I make a frame out of PVC pipe to
make a tent like structure over the car. This way the car can breath
and change temperature better. You want to try and not have water
condensing anywhere.
I like to make the tent out of the House wrap that also breaths and
allows mosture to flow out of it. Make sure you have it facing the
right direction.
Always always park on plastic to stop the moisture from coming up from
the floor. Cement is very porus and allows mosture to flow through it.
Same goes for hoods and trunks, I like them open a bit. If you think
keeping them closed will keep out mice, not them critters! But air
flow is inportant. Just use metal screening to fill the gaps. Roll the
windows down a few inches and put a screen or brass pads to allow air
to flow but keep the animals out.
Use the brass scrubbing pads to block EVERY hole on the car. Mice and
rats cannot chew through it, but it still allows air to flow.
WD40 all the rubber and plastic.
"Elephant Oil" treatment on all leather.
I drain my carbs and filll them up with WD40 as it will not dry up as
fast as gas. You are talking years of storage and the gas will evorate
and crust things up.
Mix hot sause with WD40 to spray wires. Mice love to eat the plastic
off wires, for some reason, but are not into hot sause.
Scoopable cat litter makes good moisture absorbing pads. I fill up old
nilon stockings (no not mine...you guys).
I do put the dryer fabric sofener sheets all over the car. "They" say
mice do not like them. Don't know but they smell good and are cheep. I
also put a lot of them around the base of the tire as this is the way
the mouse will climb up into your car. Ask me about what racoons can do
to a car some day...
Then do everything the rest of the guys said to do. It still will be
very hard on the car. The overall best thing to do is ship me the car.
I will drive and care for your Cat as if was my child and it will come
backk to you like the day you left it.
Larry (rasing Pantera awareness across Ohio) - Cleveland
-----Original Message-----
From: DeTomaso [mailto:detomaso-bounces at server.detomasolist.com] On
Behalf Of Bob via DeTomaso
Sent: June 14, 2018 4:47 PM
To: charlesmccall at gmail.com; detomaso at server.detomasolist.com
Subject: Re: [DeTomaso] Preparing a car for long term storage
Hi Charlie: One other thing I do each fall is block the suspension so
it remains under compression and not hanging down but lifts the tires
of the ground. Bob Reid
In a message dated 6/13/2018 1:13:00 AM Eastern Standard Time,
charlesmccall at gmail.com writes:
Hi all and greetings from Chennai, India. After our trip to Le Mans
Classic in a few weeks, I will be putting the Pantera (and probably
the
Benelli Sei and Suzuki as well - last chance to buy the Benelli!!!)
into storage. It's entirely possible that the next time the engine
will
be started is in 2 years' time. It may be less, but I'd prefer to plan
for the worst-case scenario. In any case, the car won't be seeing
regular use in the medium term future.A
Suggestions on what should be done? Battery tender is obvious, but
what
else? Is it really necessary to put the car on jack stands? Will
modern
tires really get flat spots, and won't those go away after a few
miles?A Add fuel stabilizer to the tank is a good idea I imagine. Am I
better off disconnecting the fuel line and letting the carb run dry,
or
it doesn't really matter? Not sure how I'd do that anyway without
having the fuel pump pump gas all over the floor. Any other
suggestions?A
Thank you!
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-------------- next part --------------
Hi Charlie,
I might be mistaken, but I think of Spain as having a climate similar
to Los Angeles, where moisture is a non-issue. As for rodents, you will
know if they are a problem or not.
Personally I have never had a problem with the breathable car covers
collecting moisture beneath them.
I like the idea of an empty carb. You could just let the fuel pump pump
into a gas can then pour it into the tank.
I think the gas in the tank is a quandry. If you leave the tank full
you will come back to 16 gallons of 2 year old fuel. What will you do
with it?
But if you leave the tank empty you might get corrosion in the tank.
But your climate is dry, so probably not a concern.
I would probably put the car up with blocks under the suspension just
high enough to get the tires off the ground. Or you could just take
the wheels off. (?)
Sent from AOL Mobile Mail
On Friday, June 15, 2018, Larry-Ohio Time
Corp <[1]Larry at ohiotimecorp.com> wrote:
Hi Charlie,
I do things a bit differantly then most...no big surprise to anyone!
For long term storage I do not like anything touching the car body,
like car covers, plastic, anything. I make a frame out of PVC pipe
to
make a tent like structure over the car. This way the car can breath
and change temperature better. You want to try and not have water
condensing anywhere.
I like to make the tent out of the House wrap that also breaths and
allows mosture to flow out of it. Make sure you have it facing the
right direction.
Always always park on plastic to stop the moisture from coming up
from
the floor. Cement is very porus and allows mosture to flow through
it.
Same goes for hoods and trunks, I like them open a bit. If you think
keeping them closed will keep out mice, not them critters! But air
flow is inportant. Just use metal screening to fill the gaps. Roll
the
windows down a few inches and put a screen or brass pads to allow
air
to flow but keep the animals out.
Use the brass scrubbing pads to block EVERY hole on the car. Mice
and
rats cannot chew through it, but it still allows air to flow.
WD40 all the rubber and plastic.
"Elephant Oil" treatment on all leather.
I drain my carbs and filll them up with WD40 as it will not dry up
as
fast as gas. You are talking years of storage and the gas will
evorate
and crust things up.
Mix hot sause with WD40 to spray wires. Mice love to eat the plastic
off wires, for some reason, but are not into hot sause.
Scoopable cat litter makes good moisture absorbing pads. I fill up
old
nilon stockings (no not mine...you guys).
I do put the dryer fabric sofener sheets all over the car. "They"
say
mice do not like them. Don't know but they smell good and are cheep.
I
also put a lot of them around the base of the tire as this is the
way
the mouse will climb up into your car. Ask me about what racoons can
do
to a car some day...
Then do everything the rest of the guys said to do. It still will be
very hard on the car. The overall best thing to do is ship me the
car.
I will drive and care for your Cat as if was my child and it will
come
backk to you like the day you left it.
Larry (rasing Pantera awareness across Ohio) - Cleveland
-----Original Message-----
From: DeTomaso [[2]mailto:detomaso-bounces at server.detomasolist.com]
On
Behalf Of Bob via DeTomaso
Sent: June 14, 2018 4:47 PM
To: [3]charlesmccall at gmail.com; [4]detomaso at server.detomasolist.com
Subject: Re: [DeTomaso] Preparing a car for long term storage
Hi Charlie: One other thing I do each fall is block the suspension
so
it remains under compression and not hanging down but lifts the
tires
of the ground. Bob Reid
In a message dated 6/13/2018 1:13:00 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[5]charlesmccall at gmail.com writes:
Hi all and greetings from Chennai, India. After our trip to Le Mans
Classic in a few weeks, I will be putting the Pantera (and probably
the
Benelli Sei and Suzuki as well - last chance to buy the Benelli!!!)
into storage. It's entirely possible that the next time the engine
will
be started is in 2 years' time. It may be less, but I'd prefer to
plan
for the worst-case scenario. In any case, the car won't be seeing
regular use in the medium term future.A
Suggestions on what should be done? Battery tender is obvious, but
what
else? Is it really necessary to put the car on jack stands? Will
modern
tires really get flat spots, and won't those go away after a few
miles?A Add fuel stabilizer to the tank is a good idea I imagine. Am
I
better off disconnecting the fuel line and letting the carb run dry,
or
it doesn't really matter? Not sure how I'd do that anyway without
having the fuel pump pump gas all over the floor. Any other
suggestions?A
Thank you!
_______________________________________________
Detomaso Email List is not managed by POCA
Posted emails must not exceed 1.5 Megabytes
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[6]DeTomaso at server.detomasolist.com
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message posted here to all past, current, or future members of the
list. They also grant the list owner permission to maintain an
archive
or approve the archiving of list messages.
_______________________________________________
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Posted emails must not exceed 1.5 Megabytes
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References
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2. mailto:detomaso-bounces at server.detomasolist.com?
3. mailto:charlesmccall at gmail.com
4. mailto:detomaso at server.detomasolist.com
5. mailto:charlesmccall at gmail.com
6. mailto:DeTomaso at server.detomasolist.com
7. http://server.detomasolist.com/mailman/listinfo/detomaso
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