dbsupra90 said:
looks good man.
i would have preferred swing outs, but thats just me. im not a little guy to be climbing in and out of a jungle gym.
i would also like to have some reward bars to tie in the back corners of the hatch. not really for safety per se, but would help to stiffen up that area.
130lbs isnt bad at all really. cm would have been less, but its also twice as much as ms.
good job overall!
Swingouts are nice for cars that will see a lot of street time. I don't like them as much for race cars because they do compromise some of the strength of the door bar. And with x-bars, or NASCAR bars, required for pretty much everything, swingouts are a little harder to pull off. But I was just talking to someone about trying to figure out a way to make x-bar swingouts that would still be legal for competition.
I don't think anything in the back will do anything. The only loads that are coming in are from the shock/spring and the subframe. The subframe mounts are only about 4-6 inches behind where I put the bar between the two shock towers. So there are isn't much going on back there. I'm sure in a car without a cage, there is some flex back there due to the rest of the chassis twisting, but with the cage, it should reduce all of that.
And with the weight, if you look at most rulebooks now, you have to use the same size material whether it's mildsteel or chromoly. NASA and SCCA rulebooks now have both listed as the same thing. It seems that Chromoly is on it's way out for roll cage material. It's not really worth it anymore. You'll end up paying double to have a cage that might be a little stronger. But you also have the inherent problems with putting a chromoly cage in a car. Chromoly gets brittle around the weld area and without a heat treatment, this leaves a weak area right next to the weld. So a localized heat treat could solve this, but I'm sure that would add more overall cost to the roll cage. I had also heard that NASCAR is now only allowing mild steel for the construction of their chassis, I'm not sure if it's just for the Car of Tomorrow or if it has been that way for a while now.
Tim