I've been trying to seal my rear bulkhead on my 99 spec miata and was hoping to get some feedback. The three pictures show what I've sealed so far.
1. Around the cage bars
2. Covered all holes in the SBT
3. Covered all bolt holes.
Is this good? Anybody see anything I missed that they'll point out at tech.
thanks.
Duncan
Bulkhead Sealing - Pictures, Feedback Needed
Started by
Duncan
, 12-26-2010 01:30 PM
#1
Posted 12-26-2010 01:30 PM
#2
Posted 12-26-2010 01:44 PM
Put a bright light in the trunk and then look for light leaks in the interior. That will show you what is left to seal.
Lee Tilton
Brimtek Motorsports
Team Four Racing
Brimtek Motorsports
Team Four Racing
#3
Posted 12-26-2010 06:30 PM
Looks pretty good to me Duncan. Wish mine was that clean and I have passed tech in two different regions so I am sure
tech will be no problem. Agree with Lee regarding light in the trunk.
tech will be no problem. Agree with Lee regarding light in the trunk.
#4
Posted 12-26-2010 06:59 PM
Looks pretty good to me Duncan. Wish mine was that clean and I have passed tech in two different regions so I am sure
tech will be no problem. Agree with Lee regarding light in the trunk.
Thanks,
I did use the light in the trunk to plug the holes. Couldn't find any pictures of other people's rear bulkheads so just wanted a sanity check to make sure I had the right idea.
Duncan
#5
Posted 12-27-2010 06:40 AM
Looks good. On a related note the tech guys in my division (SEDiv) want the removable panel over the gas filler hoses to be installed.
Scott
Scott
#6
Posted 12-27-2010 09:01 AM
Chances are they won't point anything out in tech.
The light method is good. I see a number of gaps I don't see filled that I filled. I did go a bit over the top though sealing a few things. Some were probably gaps to nowhere.
A tube of high temp RTV sealant that fits in a caulking gun (available at parts stores) goes a long way to sealing funny gaps and corners. It looks like hell until you paint it, then it's invisible, and easier than fire blocking foam.
The light method is good. I see a number of gaps I don't see filled that I filled. I did go a bit over the top though sealing a few things. Some were probably gaps to nowhere.
A tube of high temp RTV sealant that fits in a caulking gun (available at parts stores) goes a long way to sealing funny gaps and corners. It looks like hell until you paint it, then it's invisible, and easier than fire blocking foam.
#7
Posted 12-27-2010 09:41 AM
The best caulk to use is a fire-stopping product that we use in commercial buildings. 3m makes a water based firestop in a tube that is paintable after 30 minutes. Good stuff !! Its the 3m CP25WB+ little pricey but it isn't flammable.
- Keith Novak likes this
Jeff Gruter
Excell Motorsports
Paramount Tool & Equiptment http://www.ptetool.com/
Hatzel & Buehler Electrical Construction - IBEW
#8
Posted 01-11-2011 03:13 PM
Duncan,
That looks very clean. Job well done. I'm doing mine this winter for a new build. Do you mind sharing which aluminized tape you used and where you sourced it?
Thanks for your help.
Kevin
That looks very clean. Job well done. I'm doing mine this winter for a new build. Do you mind sharing which aluminized tape you used and where you sourced it?
Thanks for your help.
Kevin
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