The MGA With An Attitude
MGAguru.com   MGAguru.com
MGA Guru Is GOING MOBILE - (March 1 - March 15, 2026)

Sunday, March 1, 2026:
What a way to kill a day. I was documenting the double threaded stud that secures the brake circuit 5-way fitting to the frame side rail in the MGA. This is such an obscure part that it may never get disassembled, even during restoration work. Being such a low demand part, it has not been commercially available from any known source for decades. When I couldn't find a picture of it, I had to fudge one. It has three different factory part numbers, the third one superseding the other two, AHH5195, AHH5875, FHS0411.

Monday, March 2, 2026:
Interesting day, stuff happening. Finally got enough info from the vintage radiator rebuilder, and shipped my old cell core radiator off to Salt Lake City, Utah for rebuilding. Also progress on a replacement crankshaft in California, getting off to a machine shop for appraisal and Quotes, expecting to be a week for service before shipping to Florida. And, oddly enough, it looks like we are getting another crankshaft for spare from Arizona, go figure. Wait to see which one may arrive first.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026:
If I keep picking away at these threaded studs in my spare time, we might eventually get the whole collection documented. This AHH5299 Stud is short and fat, 3/8-in diameter studs on top of the intake manifold in pushrod engine MGA's. Two of these secure the Accelerator Abutment Bracket (holding two cables), heater return pipe P-clips, and the firing order and valve clearance brass tag.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026:
Got these two documented before lunch, ARH898 and ARH899 Studs that hold the grille together on the MGA. -- And just got a phone call from Arizona. One good used 18G/18GA type crankshaft is boxed up and being shipped today. Only guaranteed to be a good core, don't know until I see it if it might be usable as-is. I suspect it may arrive by the time the one in California is finished being polished or re-ground. -- And now, Fed-X tracking just changed my core radiator delivery to Utah from Friday to next Monday. Grrrrr.

Thursday, March 5, 2026:
Just uploaded a new tech article TS-101B for repair of the MGA turn signal vacuum timer switch. This one is compliments of Ed Hollingsworth in Omaha, Nebraska, USA. He found a novel way to repair the common stripped or broken threaded mounting spigot on the front end of the switch housing.


Friday, March 6, 2026:
The Corvette at Tech Central is still having electrical problems, as well as the struggle to install the new rag top, and slow.


Someone was repairing a crank handle for an MGA screw jack. The original rivet joint had decomposed, so they replaced the rivet with a bolt and self-locking nut, and put a flat washer in between to make it fold more smoothly.

Navigator and i got busy changing our battery ground cable, long time overdue. It became more urgent a day or two ago when the car wouldn't start without aid of a small jumper box. Jerry was making good progress on the Sirocco engine, getting close to race ready again.

Late afternoon , posting today's photos and notes. Then from evening to late night, making good progress on Part Numbers tech pages for threaded studs, mostly Twin Cam engine parts that have very sparse documentation, little current parts supply, and very few pictures of the parts to be found anywhere.

Saturday, March 7, 2026: MGA Twin Cam  stud for cam carrier bearing cap
Half a day of very good progress on the Part Numbers tech pages for threaded studs, mostly for Twin Cam engine parts. We now have new information pages for AEH375 Stud, AEH390 Stud, AEH549 Stud, AEH583 Stud, CHS0512 Stud, CHS0520 Stud, CLS0512 Stud, CLS2512 Stud, and CLS2613 Stud.
As I was on line uploading the new "Studs" data and pages, the data stream died. Now my web site and email are nested on the CMGC web server account, so if the CMGC server has a problem it rubs off on me, and my web site goes down along with my email. I knew exactly when this happened. After 20 minutes poking around, everything on the internet was working, except the club server account being dead, while the server company web site was still working. A quick call to the current CMGC webmaster to notify him that the club server was dead. He was on the road, arriving home an hour later before he could call the server company to investigate. After another hour and a half (mostly on hold), the issues were resolved, and the club server was back on line (along with my web site and email). That killed a few hours, then back to work.

Sunday, March 8, 2026: Stud- AHH5805
My significant challenge for today was to resolve the last part number on my list of Threaded Studs used in MGA cars. This one was AHH5805 Stud, used to secure the fuel pump to its mounting bracket in the MGA Twin Cam (and "Deluxe") cars. The special drawing number was required due to an odd combination of threads. The base end screwing into the fuel pump housing has 5/16-22-BSF thread (pre-war hold-over design),while the exposed end has 5/16-24-UNF thread for a post-war hex nut. Go ahead and tear your hair out. I'm still missing the length of a few of the studs, but at least I have the tech pages up for all of them.

Monday, March 9, 2026:
Weekend over, time for business calls. The best news is, the next replacement crankshaft in the shop in California has been cleaned, crack tested, and polished. Undersize is 0.010M, 0.010R, it polished up nicely and does not need to be ground again. And it is being shipped out today, now need to find new bearings of it. The other "spare" crankshaft from Arizona should arrive tomorrow. My cell core radiator has arrived in Utah today, where it will be re-cored as original, give it a week maybe before being shipped back.

Tuesday, March109, 2026:
Waiting patiently while watching tracking information, package from Arizona arrived early afternoon. Open the box to check out a "spare" 18GA crankshaft. This one is standard size on both main and rod journals, mains are perfect, while rods are slightly scuffed and will need a regrind. Clean it to inspect and measure it, grease it for preservation, pack it back in the box, clearly labeled, and stash it in the attic for future reference. It would have been nice to have this one three months ago. But for now, the "real" one from California, checked and polished, M.010, R.010, was shipped yesterday, and may arrive by the week end. More good news is, our freshly re-cored cellular core radiator (very expensive) is finished and is shipping from Utah today. With luck, that one may also be here by the week end. Late night ordering of Main and Rod bearings (and a few more trivial parts)..

HomeBackNext
home-back-up-next
Thank you for your comments -- Send e-mail to <Barney Gaylord>
© 2026 Barney Gaylord -- Copyright and reprint information