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Author: Subject: Help, New build. Chassis, Wishbones, Sierra
Boost69

posted on 1/10/06 at 09:36 PM Reply With Quote
Help, New build. Chassis, Wishbones, Sierra

Help, Been reading 'the book' for ages and finally got round to starting, then found your Locost site, its splendid but blew my head to bits with all the extra info.
Almost finished stripping a 1990 Sierra 1.6L as the donor, I am intending to use a bike engine aswell.
A couple of questions spring to mind:
1) There seems to be some discrepencies with the book chassis/wish bone dimensions, Can I still use the sierra uprights, and do the wishbone mounting points need altering?
2) I know it might be daft but whats the difference between De Dion and IRS?
3)I intend to use the sierra rear end - diff/drivshafts/drums etc, Does the chassis need to be made wider than the book to suit this? If so will the front need altering so the front wheels line up with the rear?
4) I have been offered a cheap(ish) Suzuki TL1000S, will a V-twin engine be ok?
Sorry for all the questions, just want to get off on the right foot!

Thanks.......Boost.

[Edited on 1/10/06 by Boost69]

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Catpuss

posted on 1/10/06 at 10:03 PM Reply With Quote
I think the book is cortina uprights only. Check the McSorley (?) or locost.info (?) sites for all the corrections to the book.

I would suspect a TL thou motor would be too lumpy. Espesh with its almost off/on power delivery. I ride a VTR1000 but the inlaws have a TL thou based Raptor and my mate has a TL thou. They all say the TL engine is very off the power on the power.

But then people have used 2CVs for engines. Personally I'd go for an inline 4 if using a bike engine or a V4 if you can get a big enough one.

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mistergrumpy

posted on 1/10/06 at 10:07 PM Reply With Quote
Hello mate. All questions I asked not too long back so I'll answer them best I can.
1) Discrepancy with book wishbones is in the castor angle. Do a search but its basically the offset of the threaded part of top wishbone from centre and its to enable better centering really. You can still use Sierra uprights and your mounting points possibly may need moving. Best to tack them on when you triangulate everything up. For best castor angle (offset) do a search I can't quite remember off hand but there's loads on it.
2) De Dion axle is sold by GTS and I believe Caterham use it. Its a solid type axle with trailing arms attached to it like the book. IRS is independant rear suspension i.e. wishbones just like the front. Lots of opinions on this but best I read was that IRS is better for on track english type axle like in the book can be better for road and De Dion is a bit of a play off between the two.
3)I and many are using Sierra rear end, you don't necessarily need to alter the arse end of the chassis unless you want to, just fit slightly wider raer arches which are readily available, but its up to you, some people just don't like that wider rear look. To be honest from looking at some pictures I really can't tell much.
4) Dunno. Sorry.
Hope this helps and as usual its open to the usual helpful comments by anyone else in case you feel I'm talking out of my arse anywhere along the line






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scotty g

posted on 2/10/06 at 07:10 AM Reply With Quote
Hi Boost,
Most people now use sierra parts due to the rarity of mark2 escorts.
Companies like GTS can supply you with the correct wishbones and parts needed as well as the de-dion tube you need to retain the sierras IRS, you can go with rear wishbones if you like but this will deviate significantly from the book design.
Wider rear arches are widely used, many people including myself think that it makes the car look better anyway, more aggresive!
Bike engines that tend to get used the most are large 4 pots like R1, Blackbird, ZZR and Hyabusa. The only V that gets used is Hondas Pan-European, not as powerful as the others but very torquey by bike standards.
Cheers.

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procomp

posted on 2/10/06 at 07:26 AM Reply With Quote
Hi mistergrumpy has got it the wrong way round with the suspension IRS is better for road use and the live axle/dedion is better for the track with the axle being lighter than the de dion setup.

cheers matt

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mistergrumpy

posted on 2/10/06 at 08:32 AM Reply With Quote
Sorry






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procomp

posted on 2/10/06 at 02:12 PM Reply With Quote
Hi keeps em on thier toes cant make it to easy for them.

cheers matt

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NS Dev

posted on 2/10/06 at 02:24 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Boost69
Help, Been reading 'the book' for ages and finally got round to starting, then found your Locost site, its splendid but blew my head to bits with all the extra info.
Almost finished stripping a 1990 Sierra 1.6L as the donor, I am intending to use a bike engine aswell.
A couple of questions spring to mind:
1) There seems to be some discrepencies with the book chassis/wish bone dimensions, Can I still use the sierra uprights, and do the wishbone mounting points need altering?
2) I know it might be daft but whats the difference between De Dion and IRS?
3)I intend to use the sierra rear end - diff/drivshafts/drums etc, Does the chassis need to be made wider than the book to suit this? If so will the front need altering so the front wheels line up with the rear?
4) I have been offered a cheap(ish) Suzuki TL1000S, will a V-twin engine be ok?
Sorry for all the questions, just want to get off on the right foot!

Thanks.......Boost.

[Edited on 1/10/06 by Boost69]


Depending on what comes with it I would be very interested in buying the TL motor though!!!!

For a 7 you would indeed be better with a 4 cyl bike engine but for my grasstrack car I need a pair of TL 1000's with injection etc still attached (+ ecu's etc)





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NS Dev

posted on 2/10/06 at 02:32 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by mistergrumpy
Sorry


let me just briefly interject with an explanation:

the reason the live axle is good on the track is that a car equipped with it can be very light. The main reason for this is that the chassis was originally designed for a live axle and so has strangth in the right areas for the job.

The big downside of the live axle is what you meet on the queen's highway.....bumps!!!!!

The live axle itself is quite heavy, meaning high unsprung weight, which when it is attached to a very light car makes sortind damping out extremely difficult.

Remember that the perfect setup would have an infinitely heavy car with an infinitely light axle attached. the further away from this you get the worse it is to damp as a mechanism.

On a 7, the axle weighs not that much less than the bit of car it is attached to, and in very simple terms, the spring doesn't know whether it is boinging the car or the axle..............result is lots of axle "skipping" over bumps etc.

The compromise is de-dion, this still feeds the loads into the right bits if the chassis that Colin Chapman intended, whilst giving a much lighter unsprung weight and moving the weight of the diff etc to the car, thus making the spring to unsprung weight ratio much more favourable.

Wishbone rear IRS is a whole different ball game, and VERY variable in terms of quality and effectiveness on 7's from various manufacturers.

basically, for a "bookish" car, go for de-dion for road use and live axle for track.





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mistergrumpy

posted on 2/10/06 at 03:20 PM Reply With Quote
Aye. ^That^ sounds better. I thought I was right in De Dion for road use or should I say I thought that I'd read that De Dion was better, not to cause any arguments.






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NS Dev

posted on 2/10/06 at 03:37 PM Reply With Quote
but remember that live axle makes for the lightest car (just not less unsprung weight)





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kb58

posted on 2/10/06 at 07:47 PM Reply With Quote
The one big advantage of the live-axle (simple installation) tends to drown out all of its real disadvantages.

For a track car it's important to place roll-centers (RC) where the design dictates; it's not possible to do that with the typical panhard rod. Staniforth goes into great detail about the importance of proper roll-center placement. A live axle has the problem of an RC that moves up and down with the axle, not a way to have good handling.

One reason people say to use the live-axle on a track is because of how smooth the track is. I guess you guys across the pond have smoother tracks than in the U.S. Here the tracks are very much like the public steets with bumps and cracks. I've had cars car skip sideways hitting broken concrete on our not-so-smooth tracks.

I have no problem with the live-axle being toted as the practical solution to a problem - cheap and simple counts for a lot. But it always bends me the wrong way when it's claimed to be the same as IRS on track. The fact that the outside edges of the tires wear first on a race track should tell us the tires are rolling and that camber compensation is needed. A live axle can't do that. Yes it can be bent to add static camber, but that harms straight-line acceration and braking. It's always something.

And finally, most home-built cars are driven far more on the steet than on track, and the street is very bumpy. I completely agree with Rorty, trying to make a heavy live-axle work under a car with such little weight is worse than difficult. I also agree with Rorty about it not being easy to fit an IRS into a 7 chassis.


[Edited on 10/2/06 by kb58]





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NS Dev

posted on 3/10/06 at 02:46 PM Reply With Quote
I'm not Rorty!!! LOL!!!





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whittlebeast

posted on 3/10/06 at 03:34 PM Reply With Quote
All live-axle (simple installation) rear suspensions have issues with the rear axle always putting down more force on one side of the car. It is a function of the rotation direction of drive shaft. The degree of this issue depends on the torque of the motor times the gear ratio of the transmission. In my case this is about 1500 ft-lbs of torque. Look at any typical drag race car on launch and the twist of the chassis and how much one of the front tires comes off the track. Independents and DeDion designs don't have this issue. See the Caroll Smith books for more info.

AW

[Edited on 3/10/06 by whittlebeast]

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Boost69

posted on 3/10/06 at 09:05 PM Reply With Quote
Nice one gents, thanks for all your advice/comments.

Think i've settled for the de-dion back end, will this fit straight onto a book chassis or does it have to be altered? How wide are the driver and passenger cells? I'm not all skin and bone! So I might Go for the Mcsorley +4, don't suppose anyone has a book chassis and lives near Scunthorpe so that I could try my rear end in one?

Just thought I'd mention that I got the TL1000 tonight, couldn't refuse it for the money. So it might be interesting to drive to say the least.

[Edited on 3/10/06 by Boost69]

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MikeRJ

posted on 4/10/06 at 09:38 AM Reply With Quote
I onlt have experience of the GTS De-Dion:

Some modifcations are required to the rear chassis to provide some extra clearance, but they are very straightforward. Darren can supply a PDF showng the mods required.

The top shock mounting brackets also need to be fitted 90 degrees from the book position, i.e. the shock mounting bolt points to the front and rear of the car rather than from side to side.

Also you need to weld some diff carriers onto the frame behind the transmission tunnel to suport the Sierra diff, again not a difficult job and the plates to be welded can either be fabricated at home or bought from GTS, MK etc..etc.. This applies to all De-Dion axles.

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Boost69

posted on 4/10/06 at 10:14 PM Reply With Quote
Thanks who's darren? How do I contact him?
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JoelP

posted on 5/10/06 at 05:10 PM Reply With Quote
darren is darren george from gts tuning.

Some say you need a high calibre voodoo witch to summon him, others just use the workshop phone number.

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