Hello all.
My Appia's boot is still jammed shut. I did not fancy rolling around in mouldy wet leaves under the front of the car, so I removed the rear seat, removed the carboard trim panel behind the seat, and reached past the bracing cross members to connect long and heavy duty jumper cables to the battery. I passed the cables through an open rear window, connected them to my Lancia 2000 HF, and the Appia coughed into life on the third go.
I took the car for a good run up and down the nearby A road, and then put the car into the dry and warm garage where it usually lives. The carpet on the driver's side is pretty wet (there is a fan heater in the garage). There are signs of surface rust here and there - on one hubcab, the rear bumper, and the door locking mechanism at the base of the clap-hands bit. Some areas of greater concern where the paint is bad may have worsened. Hey ho, that's my fault for losing the keys and then, after finding them, being busy in London and unable to sort the car out while it sat out under a tree. My mechanic is in Taiwan, Chinese New Yearing with his family, so he could not assist.
I had left the car in neutral with the handbrake off, and neither the brakes nor the clutch were seized.
On the same day that I mislaid my Appia keys (dropped behind a bit of furniture), I also mislaid the keys to my Series III Land Rover (in a bag that went to London). The Landy was at least under partial cover in an open sided barn, being used for ablutions by a barn owl and some wood pigeons. I found the Landy keys last week, so yesterday it also got jump started via the 2000 HF. I took the Landy for a run and a wash.
The Appia is as yet unwashed. Here it is looking relieved but also a bit ticked off that it had to spend half the winter out of doors only a twenty second drive from its garage.
PS: Yes, the engine does leak oil more than it should - needs some new gasketry, I think.
PPS: Many thanks to Jim for sending a new petrol cap and seal, as it needed those also