Clementine's Garage
Clementine the Cat
 
Image of flower
Yellow R4
 
Réparateur d'automobiles

GTL from Portugal

Day 4 - Varenna to Venice

So we set off on a elatively short 3.5 hour drive, slipstreaming juggernauts on the Autostrada so we could maximise our time at our destination.

At a fuel stop near Verona I noticed a different tyre had lost pressure. Another one? Tried to reinflate it using the garage air line, but this prompted a massive leak from the tyre valve - doh.

No choice but to jack it up and put the spare on - my first wheel change in the wild with this car. The pump attendant kindly insisted on helping -

B530E6F7-E86E-4F02-96EA-563FBA004017.jpeg

Now I had checked the pressure of the spare before the trip, which was fine. However it came with the car and I hadn’t taken it out of its cradle before. In the Italian sunlight I could now see how ancient and glossy hard it was :doh:

We drove very gingerly indeed to the nearest tyre shop, where we waited for them to re-open after lunch... then had a new inner tube fitted to the flat tyre -

F1397FA9-241A-46A8-AC43-E180822513A4.jpeg

Inner tube? I thought all car tyres were tubeless but seems I missed something.,,

We arrived in Venice at 4pm and left João at the most expected parking yet.

What to show your partner of Venice in one evening? We took a Vaporetto down the Grand Canal passing under the Rialto, dumped bags at our hotel in Dorsoduro, then walked to S Maria de la Salute -

22FDF7D8-23AD-4376-875E-45397319AD7F.jpeg

4555D2A8-88A6-4E7F-B29F-758B3E66371A.jpeg

088003CB-BF6F-4315-BF24-A085F43F2597.jpeg

Then headed to Piazza San Marco, did a brief walking tour, then (my treat) flopped down at Cafe Florian for chilled rose and live music :D

92CD4C2C-E71E-4946-8430-DA00EE32ECD2.jpeg

70024F59-9146-4130-8AE0-C3F4970C8C4C.jpeg

Venice had certainly lost none of its magic, and was blessedly un-crowded this early in the season. If only we had longer - but we had a boat to catch in the morning...

Best wishes, Simon.
 
Day 5 & 6 - Venice to Athens

Hello @angel - yes it was great to meet, promise I’ll get to that bit soon :)

Day 5 was the start of the second phase of our trip, with less driving and a lot of sitting on boats!

The voyage to Patras on a large and mostly-empty Anek Lines cruise ferry took a pleasant 32 hours. Nothing to do except eat, drink, check out the billiard-table flat Adriatic, and watch TV in our cabin.

More trucks than cars in this route
DCFD9577-4078-4941-B497-D1FAEFE0CDC6.jpeg

Safely tucked up well below the waterline
C15C2D28-357E-48E5-8B7F-5EB97666192F.jpeg

Under way
B2577274-97E4-44E5-AE3F-0E006526A1AB.jpeg

Plain sailing
7A6B15FF-18CB-4993-B96D-CDAFFEDCA9A8.jpeg

Onboard catering was hearty and reasonably-priced :)
C0A7B7EF-B0B9-451E-9BBD-CBE01215C464.jpeg

The only hitch was that the boat left Venice nearly four hours late, so instead of 9pm we disembarked at 1am - with a 3.5 hour drive through the night to Athens.

The highway from Patras was however great and (barring a few trucks) completely empty. Nevertheless we were frazzled when we dropped into bed at 5am.

2am fuel stop, no one around but at least open!
222F9E94-C79C-4E93-9642-FA9AE5D43F30.jpeg

Best wishes, Simon.
 
Day 7 - Athens to the Greek Islands

So we had one afternoon to spend in Athens before boarding our teatime ferry at Piraeus. It was a little more eventful than we planned.

We know the city well, so had no tourist agenda, but had an important rendezvous we'd set up ahead of time to meet a certain @angel well known to this forum :)

Arriving back at the car with our cases it was immediately obvious that the first tyre which had lost pressure, all the way back in Switzerland, was half flat again :doh:

So we limped to a tyre shop a few blocks away. By this point I was really wishing I'd just bitten the bullet and replaced the whole set the car came with back in London, but (spare tyre excepted) they did at least look in good condition and with plenty of tread, even if they were a budget brand. Another leaking inner tube was diagnosed and replaced for a reasonable 15 Euros, and we continued our journey.

Another day, another tyre shop
IMG_7330.JPG

Then, in dense Saturday afternoon downtown traffic, Joao suddenly cut out again, as he had at the Gotthard Tunnel. This time I couldn't get him restarted. Oops.

We phoned Angel to see if he knew who we could ask to help get us going again, so we could at least make our ferry. Minutes later Angel himself arrived, on a lovely classic Honda C90, with a rucksack full of tools and parts. Minutes after that he'd diagnosed fuel pump failure, then set about grafting an electric fuel pump he'd brought into the system to get the car running again :clapping:

We then followed him back to his workshop for a bit of further fettling, and to meet his R4 for a photo as originally planned...

Angel's Bat Cave, full of interesting stuff including his delightful R4 with oxblood vinyl interior and lots of interesting bits
IMG_7337.JPG

IMG_7339.JPG

Sadly by the time this was all done we were already out of time, so had to make early goodbyes and head off for the ferry port. I can't express enough our gratitude to Angel for getting our wheels turning again, so we could finish our adventure with no major disruption.

At least goodbye was au revoir, not adieu: Joao will definitely be making a return trip soon, and we're looking forward to getting to know Angel better when he does :D

With no further hitches we made the port of Piraeus in good time for our sailing, and joined the throng of vehicles waiting to embark -

IMG_7343.JPG

(last pics to follow, my phone has stopped talking to my PC...)
 
Day 8 - arrival in Rhodes

Journey’s end: after a sound sleep we rolled off the ferry in the town of Rhodes mid morning. Our last drive was a mere ten minutes to our apartment where, amazingly, there was a parking space right outside our building :D

Unloading the kitchen sink we brought from Athens
7344E390-1FDE-4C5E-AFF1-79F205EAD482.jpeg

Joao, meet your new home
7E08DAB2-4315-4C9E-8EF9-13CA4D5596B7.jpeg

The trip had taken us 7 days, 3 hours. We’d driven just over 1,000 miles, and I was delighted to discover João had returned a journey average of 51mpg!

Two days later we did the reverse - by air - in 3.5 hours. Not the same deal at all...

Best wishes, Simon.
 
Hello all,

I haven't been around much lately and have some catching up to do. Meanwhile, as I'm sat at my work PC...

After a long summer of doing other things, I finally got to visit Rhodes last week - and have an emotional reunion with Joao, whom I hadn't seen since Easter :D

A local friend has kindly been keeping him off the street and under cover at a lock-up, to which he took me on arrival at the island...

IMG_8144.JPG

The same friend couldn't bear the sight of Joao's goat scoop, and had arranged to have him fixed by his daughter's boyfriend's motor repair workshop. They did a great job - pulling/ beating the damaged panels 95% straight before repainting the whole front of the car up to the A-pillars. Sorry, I have no process pics of this!

The colour match is spot-on and the shine puts the rest of the car to shame. Just a faint memory of goat in the slightly wavy front panel - perfect :laughing:
 
229F93F4-21CA-4659-9C86-E20B1DA2B90D.jpeg

After this Joao accompanied us pottering round doing normal stuff on a Greek island - buying watermelon from the melon man...

65A26F73-92F4-4E0E-806D-21140BC7DE3B.jpeg


Visiting friends...

DB278A82-9664-4360-947B-8D175BB32B32.jpeg

Getting stuff for the beach...

3C346B19-3B16-401B-8B86-D0F5BAD953ED.jpeg

And of course trips to the beach...

67AB209B-D47E-46E8-9537-36E72CB8D2F7.jpeg

During the week we made a few small tweaks, tracking a loose bulb connection, adjusting door striker plates, and finding the source of a pesky rattle in the boot.

As always the car got a lot of attention from passerby, with various waves, toots, questions and selfies :)
 
Amongst the battered and dusty moderns there is a smattering of other classics on the island, allegedly including one other R4 which we’ve yet to spot...

1842000C-5FC7-446F-BF5A-D2A7518D6504.jpeg

63F2110A-989E-4982-AE7C-97101D689DAF.jpeg

FFACDD75-8C5C-4AA6-A436-62FFC8914E4B.jpeg

5780F8FB-B599-4167-BAF3-94D907065C07.jpeg

Apparently Joao is not the only immigrant on the island - this 2CV is on Greek plates but has giveaway German dealer surrounds...

6025F250-50A2-4B31-874F-415CF142E3B9.jpeg
 
Good to see other classic cars still driving, and in my opinion the retro models of the original classics are not it!
I hope they never make a retro out of the R4.
 
Re-registration?, if so happy days!, the open roads call...
 
Evening all,

Whoops that was a longer break in posting than I planned.

Absolutely @laxeian , Joao now finally has a Greek registration :D

In summary it took us seven days to drive across Europe, and a year and a half for the paperwork to catch up :o

Massive debt of gratitude to my Greek partner who has done all the negotiating with the authorities. We even had to fly my Portuguese friend in UK, who helped broker our original purchase, out to Greece to sign papers ...twice.

Would I recommend a Brit exporting a Portuguese-registered car to Greece? Ahem, nope.

I understand from @angel that Customs law has now changed, effectively making it impossible to import a car more than five years old to Greece, so I guess the point is moot. Apparently we cleared our Customs paperwork mere weeks or days before the deadline - phew.

IMG_9856.JPG
 
Last month we managed to weave between lockdowns in various places and spend a week visiting relatives in Rhodes. And of course got to see Joao for the first time in a year.

He'd been serviced by a local garage. Clearly needs a tune by the state of the plugs, last set didn't look like this -

IMG_9839.JPG

We managed to get hold of a square-format rear number plate from a place in Athens (a process in itself - you can't get them from the registering authority, just wide plates), but it came up smaller than the original so we couldn't re-use the original fixing holes in the tailgate. Interim solution while getting a plate carrier surround made up -

IMG_9847.JPG

One day, just after filling up, the car developed an acute fuel leak. Luckily we were close to our local workshop, so nipped in. We found the fuel pipes in this condition - gotta love that E10 fuel...

IMG_9838.JPG

Engine fire averted, we were free to spend the week pottering around. As usual didn't want to leave, car or island! Lucky we got to go there at all though, so very happy.

Best wishes, Simon.

IMG_9834.JPG
 
Thank you for this. I have a query. My FASA R4 TL is a 1984 and doesn't appear to have any mounts for the seatbelts. I intend to get someone to weld in some for me and it is interesting to see that others here recommend that the fittings are on the tailgate surround and not the metal strip beside the parcel tray. I have seen them in both places on R4s but it does make sense that it is stronger near the tailgate.
Any recommendations?
Hello Peter,

I'm planning 3 point rear seatbelts for my 1988 FASA R4 TL and have searched the forum for previous on this. I hope resuscitating this older thread is the best way of picking up where you seem to have got to, and wonder if you (or anyone else on the forum) has succeeded in doing this?

The photo of the triangular, threaded lug on the tailgate surround is useful. Has anyone retro-fitted these on their own car?

Thank you,

Ben
 
Hello all,
No tinkering or mishaps to report, but for the first time in a fortnight the weather was good enough this evening to take João out for a short run... I’d been getting withdrawal!
Nice trundle up to the shops gave me a chance to test his new yellow headlamps :)

View attachment 22722

View attachment 22723
Looking great, especially after the traumatic journey it just had!
 
Back
Top