I've
pretty well documented what I sold from Winky, but I haven't really laid out what I kept. Here's what I saved from my donor:
- Engine (minus intake and exhaust plumbing before and after the manifolds, power steering and AC hardware)
- Tranny, driveshaft, Torsen differential, propshafts
- Shifter boot and shift knob
- PPF (for reference)
- Steering wheel, column, shaft, rack, tie rods (I have other plans, but I kept these as a backup)
- Suspension uprights, lower ball joints, associated mounting bolts
- Brake calipers and mounting brackets
- E-brake lever, e-brake cables
- ECU and mounting bracket
- Complete wiring harness, relays, fuse boxes, horn, turn signal switches, etc.
- Accelerator pedal assy, throttle cable, speedometer cable
- Fuel pump/vent/sender assy
- Fuel filter bracket, charcoal canister bracket, diagnostic plug bracket, fuse box brackets
- 2 eyeball vents, in-dash HVAC plumbing (for my heater outputs)
- Spare, jack, spare tools
- VIN plate from dash and sticker from driver's door jamb
- All of the rubber grommets, brake line clips and drain plugs
- A huge box of all the nuts, bolts, screws and clips I could take off
Also noteworthy is what I didn't keep, but could have. Other Miata based builders have used more stock components to lower cost and complexity in their build. I've decided not to use:
- Stock Miata seats
- Instrument cluster
- Brake and clutch pedals and master cylinders
- Rear suspension and subframe
- Wheels and tires (my donor came with heavy, ugly wheels, so I sold them; If it had the OEM 7-spoke "daisy" wheels I would have kept them)
It's easy to see why it's much cheaper to use a single donor than collect all of the parts separately. Even after keeping all these parts, I've made $500 off my donor.
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