P804
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Re: P804
Damn! I wrote a post last night, but it's not here
I think you have probably made the right decision - you are capitalising on your investment (time, money, knowledge), and you would not get that investment back in a sale price of the car.
As far as suggestions go, I would be looking at the brakes (alloy callipers, hats) and the smallest rotors I could get away with. Offset the small rotors with very high temperature pads, and do fast lap/cool down lap/fast lap sessions. Ditch the handbrake if the rules allow, alloy muffler, alloy boot floor. Invest in a good hole saw, and attack all the heavy steel sections of the chassis - with a certain amount of care for strength, but a well designed cage can be useful here, given you need a cage anyway - space frame MX5? V8roadster K-mount (or similar) would save a lot of weight.
Go the Magpie!!
I think you have probably made the right decision - you are capitalising on your investment (time, money, knowledge), and you would not get that investment back in a sale price of the car.
As far as suggestions go, I would be looking at the brakes (alloy callipers, hats) and the smallest rotors I could get away with. Offset the small rotors with very high temperature pads, and do fast lap/cool down lap/fast lap sessions. Ditch the handbrake if the rules allow, alloy muffler, alloy boot floor. Invest in a good hole saw, and attack all the heavy steel sections of the chassis - with a certain amount of care for strength, but a well designed cage can be useful here, given you need a cage anyway - space frame MX5? V8roadster K-mount (or similar) would save a lot of weight.
Go the Magpie!!
I never met a horsepower I didn't like (thanks bwob)
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Re: P804
greenMachine wrote:As far as suggestions go, I would be looking at the brakes (alloy callipers, hats) and the smallest rotors I could get away with. Offset the small rotors with very high temperature pads, and do fast lap/cool down lap/fast lap sessions. Ditch the handbrake if the rules allow, alloy muffler, alloy boot floor. Invest in a good hole saw, and attack all the heavy steel sections of the chassis - with a certain amount of care for strength, but a well designed cage can be useful here, given you need a cage anyway - space frame MX5?
Speaking of the hand brake, the cables alone weight 1kg (found out yesterday), also removing the mechanical parts from the rear brakes for the hand brake is not hard.
Space frame - not allowed in clubsprint
However, has anybody considered turning the sills into either ducting or using the channel air out of the front wheel well? Some savings and possible aero advantage...
- greenMachine
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Re: P804
and the Where to remove weight from a track only car? sticky from MTnet (only 400 posts ... )
As a track car, structural steel behind the rear subframe mounts and in front of the K-mount is all redundant - all you need is enough strength to mount the panels/garnish/nosecone, and of course the wing/splitter.
I never met a horsepower I didn't like (thanks bwob)
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Re: P804
greenMachine wrote:As a track car, structural steel behind the rear subframe mounts and in front of the K-mount is all redundant - all you need is enough strength to mount the panels/garnish/nosecone, and of course the wing/splitter.
Now that is interesting... Time to check the rules. I cannot have a fully tubular construction or composite monocoques and I have to retain the original firewall. The key here could be 'FULLY' tubular, could be partial...
DSCN9885 by Eipeip, on Flickr
DSCN9887 by Eipeip, on Flickr
Found in the drain tubes
DSCN9880 by Eipeip, on Flickr
Yes a 5c piece
DSCN9881 by Eipeip, on Flickr
Could see some of the front brace being replaced/removed
DSCN9889 by Eipeip, on Flickr
All this can be removed to allow the cage to be fitted "Modifications can be made to the firewall for transmission clearance, wiring or roll cage"
DSCN9890 by Eipeip, on Flickr
Only need the hardtop mounts, rest can be removed to facilitate the cage
DSCN9897 by Eipeip, on Flickr
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- Alex 2550
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Re: P804
hi Magpie,
sounds awesome!!
im very interested in seeing how this turns out, as i have owned quite a few rotors i would love to see one in the front of this thing, the 26B from memory weighs in about 180kg and i believe that was with webbers fitted but certainly don't quote me. i wonder if you would see any displacement penalty for running a rotary? if so 20B may be an option.
i have never been in a quad rotor but looked at a few, i have been in a couple 20B powered cars and going off that the 26 should be silky smooth power.
as for tube front i saw this sometime ago
http://www.speedhunters.com/2017/07/bre ... zda-miata/
it has a tube front however it looks to be heavy but it is supporting an LS3, i more so thought it may give you ideas and its always good to see how others have done it, of course this all hinges on if you can have the tube front.
best of luck with it all mate.
804kg + 26B + your knowledge on the NA chassis would = amazing!
sounds awesome!!
im very interested in seeing how this turns out, as i have owned quite a few rotors i would love to see one in the front of this thing, the 26B from memory weighs in about 180kg and i believe that was with webbers fitted but certainly don't quote me. i wonder if you would see any displacement penalty for running a rotary? if so 20B may be an option.
i have never been in a quad rotor but looked at a few, i have been in a couple 20B powered cars and going off that the 26 should be silky smooth power.
as for tube front i saw this sometime ago
http://www.speedhunters.com/2017/07/bre ... zda-miata/
it has a tube front however it looks to be heavy but it is supporting an LS3, i more so thought it may give you ideas and its always good to see how others have done it, of course this all hinges on if you can have the tube front.
best of luck with it all mate.
804kg + 26B + your knowledge on the NA chassis would = amazing!
Retro NA8
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Re: P804
Keep the suggestions links coming. Have sent an email off to the rule makers to ask what cannot be done. Have started to ask for quotes for a CAMS cage. Suggestions appreciated as well.
DSCN9916 by Eipeip, on Flickr
DSCN9912 by Eipeip, on Flickr
This is what I am thinking for the doors. "To fit the cage and to make egress safer, the windows had to be removed to fit the cage. Hence why lexan windows were needed"
Not seen it but as I imagined it, thanks!SKYHI wrote:I assume you've seen how they remove the front crash beam and replace it with a small tube to help with ducting?
CORRECT!bruce wrote:He is using his existing running gear. Cannot imagine the cost of popping in a rotary, especially a 26B.
Done... need to tidy it up.Tim_cyc03 wrote:For the front, just drill the spot welds out and you can remove that whole section with ease, and since it is destine for time attack, I would not put anything in to replace it.
DSCN9916 by Eipeip, on Flickr
DSCN9912 by Eipeip, on Flickr
This is what I am thinking for the doors. "To fit the cage and to make egress safer, the windows had to be removed to fit the cage. Hence why lexan windows were needed"
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Re: P804
Ok you guys aren't thinking through the rule set. You need to be a bit more creative and find the loop holes.
You can remove metal for wheel clearance. In a NA that means the entire inner tub of you setup the ride height low enough. Ideally run 17s with drop spindles for optimal metal removal.
You can also remove metal for cooling, so everything in front of the shock towers can go to alow airflow through the backs of the guards. Maybe some stuff behind the shock tower too to get a bit more airflow. Much better to be safe than sorry when it comes to cooling. There should really just be a couple of tubes hitting the shock towers and the chassis rails in front of the firewall.
You can also remove a whole stack of metal at the back for a diff cooler. Just find the largest and lightest aircon radiator and mount it in the spot where the metal is thickest... and of coarse you have to duct the airflow to it so you can remove pretty much the entire boot floor and rails etc. You might also need to duct it in/out the sides too. You do know mx5s need big diff coolers right?
The heaviest part of a mx5 is the sills. There are two thick metal plates pressed into the middle. That happens to be right where you need to run the lower bar for your cage... what a shame! In fact the whole cage seems to fit best right where all the heavy bits are so better start chopping.
If you design the cage, cooling, fuel tank, seating right you shouldn't have much original car left. I think 804 is easy to hit. No CF required.
You can remove metal for wheel clearance. In a NA that means the entire inner tub of you setup the ride height low enough. Ideally run 17s with drop spindles for optimal metal removal.
You can also remove metal for cooling, so everything in front of the shock towers can go to alow airflow through the backs of the guards. Maybe some stuff behind the shock tower too to get a bit more airflow. Much better to be safe than sorry when it comes to cooling. There should really just be a couple of tubes hitting the shock towers and the chassis rails in front of the firewall.
You can also remove a whole stack of metal at the back for a diff cooler. Just find the largest and lightest aircon radiator and mount it in the spot where the metal is thickest... and of coarse you have to duct the airflow to it so you can remove pretty much the entire boot floor and rails etc. You might also need to duct it in/out the sides too. You do know mx5s need big diff coolers right?
The heaviest part of a mx5 is the sills. There are two thick metal plates pressed into the middle. That happens to be right where you need to run the lower bar for your cage... what a shame! In fact the whole cage seems to fit best right where all the heavy bits are so better start chopping.
If you design the cage, cooling, fuel tank, seating right you shouldn't have much original car left. I think 804 is easy to hit. No CF required.
NA8: N/A 200whp | Haltech | Skunk2 Intake | S90 TB | RCP | 5 speed c/r dogbox | 4.78 diff | AST Shocks
Barbs L: 64.12 | S: 58.62 | Collie: 49.72
Barbs L: 64.12 | S: 58.62 | Collie: 49.72
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