That was only one of many deaths, lol
I used JB weld to clean up the holes in the rad and ran it another year like that.
The main lower control arm had one bolt to secure it to the frame (British design) and that sheared off at speed one day. I managed to bring it to a stop without incident.
I lost brake hydraulic pressure (no safety circuit, factory design) and went through an intersection, spinning and destroying a Toyota Corolla but hardly damaging the Capri. Patched up the leak and drove it home later.
The factory oil pressure gauge was a Bourdon tube, through the firewall and hooked up to the gauge. The fitting failed, spraying the driver's footwell with hot 10W30. That sidelined it for a bit, the insurance lapsed and it got towed. I gave it to the towing company to settle the bill, lol.
Ken
P.S. Oh and not only that, the full voltage (such as it was) of the ignition system was routed through the tachometer so, if the tach failed, as it once did, the car wouldn't run (spin)
Kids b**** these days when they get a Mazda, Toyota or a Honda as a first car, with more power than
two of the Capri's original 1.6 litre engines, AC, a radio, pw, locks, safety cell, airbags, and the extreme likelihood that nothing will go wrong with the car for at least 5 years.
