We have all made them, so come on fellers, what was yours.
My current TR7 was built out of a couple of derelicts, bought for $1200 the pair. One, an ex rally car had dings in every panel, but was rust free, apart from the engine. The head was in the boot, & the engine rusted solid.
I got the engine in the other running, sort of, but the clutch with the hydraulics working did not disengage, & it was so rusty I was not sure we would get it onto the trailer, with out it collapsing.
Nine months later I had one assembled car with the best of both, & a few other bits, almost ready for paint & to run. Both fuel pumps were shot, so on the big day I fitted a new one, & went for the first start.
It started fairly easily, but in a few seconds my son, about 16 at the time was yelling to shut it down. The overflow/breather pipes on the SUs float bowl tops were squirting out petrol like mini fire hoses, & running out of the carby throats from the overflowing main jets. Lucky it is a cross flow, with the exhaust on the other side.
With some research I discovered the pump sold as a replacement in Oz is a generic pump, for use on a range of English cars. It has a longer pump arm, & comes with a couple of spacers. These pack the pump off the engine block. The further off the lower the pressure. I had 4+ PSI overpowering the float needle & seat dramatically.
I found the spacers, & installed the thinner one. Success, no more fuel fire hose, but the thing was running like a bucket of bolts & the carby throats were wet with fuel.
Standing at the door keeping it running with throttle I had my son lift the carb pistons a little to find out how rich it was. On about his 3Rd lift of the front carb piston the thing backfired through that carb, simultaneously blowing, & igniting the petrol in the throat onto my sons arm, & the all over the fender.
I was quite disappointed to see my son more concerned with putting out the fire on his arm, than the car. It was only a little petrol, & the fire quickly exhausted it, but the boy did have one totally hairless arm for a while.
It required the thick spacer, plus 3 thicknesses of writing pad cardboard back to bring the fuel pressure down to the SUs required 2 PSI.
This was about the only time I was glad of my fading eyesight. I need bright light to see things well, so do this type of work out no the grass beside the shed, rather than in the shed. Thus the fuel from the earlier flooding had time & open air to disperse, before the cars flame throwing trick.