Hi all years ago when a topic came on the front page it would be down to the bottom and off within a day or so .
Now it seems to be on the front page for a month or longer
What is going on is the kitcat world collapsing?
Graham
I'd hazard a guess...
1. Folks have less disposable for such things as kit cars.
2. Intake of younger people into the world of kit cars is less.
3. LCB is down to a core of members sharing kit car other general knowledge
I've not been to a kit car show in years, but get the impression (from LCB posts) they're not what they were.
since it seems impossible to subscribe as a new member
and
several site crashes,.. & loosing members because of the various glitches in the account recovery procedure...
we unfortunately have a vastly diminished active membership.
Mmm kitkats
People are struggling to pay the bills. Website falls over monthly. Facebook and similar are hoovering up the bulk of short attention span
newbies.
Will take a miracle to turn it around.
Kit cars are not what they use to be. Indeed the whole premise of this site was based round a car claimed you could build for £250, a figure that was
truly laughable in hindsight. The SVA & IVA did not help at all driving up the cost of getting on the road and put a lot of people off including
me. There's also a lot of good competition with no shortage of reasonably priced fancy sports cars available, with loads of features not found on
most kit cars. Which you don't have to spend months if not years putting together in your garage just to drive it.
I think kit cars only now appeal to the budding engineer who loves to tinker and the driver who wants a more engaging experience from driving
(probably why EV versions are all but non-existent).
I'm still here because your a bunch of hands on engineering types that have a lot of helpful knowledge
quote:
Originally posted by Mr Whippyi think kit cars only now appeal to the budding engineer who loves to tinker and the driver who wants a more engaging experience from driving (probably why EV versions are all but non-existent).
The lack of the kit car market to offer a sensible budget EV builder package will probably be the death of it. It should be no harder to set up than your average RC car. Requirements of the IVA also seem excessive for EV’s and need a more balanced review. I saw a great little EV sports car on youtube. Battery just a brick that went into the tunnel (safest place possible), sensible power and range, plus I’m sure they said it only weighed about 600kg! Sadly, it’s very low volume so would cost a fortune. But that’s the kind of EV package that needs to be available for car builders.
I think the EV difficulties are fairly huge if trying to get through government safety needs. IF you don't start with an existing pack design,
you hit alllll sorts of safety evidence requirements. You can't even ship batteries over 100Wh without special testing/regs, you can't build
a pack that is thermal-runaway safe with DIY skills currently as you'd have to test/prove it. The voltage is a minor point compared to what
happens when you put a bomb at the centre of your tunnel - it might deflect the venting and fire downward for 30 seconds until the chassis melts, but
you probably won't be able to get out due to it venting to where your legs are.
And what's a decent range? The reason I went with a V8 instead of an EV was a) Motor weight alone for comparable power/weigh was nearing 200kg.
b) Battery weight was another 300kg to get 100 mile range, and for me a car like this is for cruising around the north of scotland, not hopping from
city charger to city charger. OF course if you're happy with a 100hp/ton and a 100 mile range, it's fairly easy. There are EV motor control
units available. But then there's less of the interest - it's just plug and play. Both that in there, wire that to that, press the
throttle. For me the fun is in the design and build.
[Edited on 9/2/2024 by coyoteboy]
I was digging further into parts sources for thus idea and really it relies on something like a tesla rear drive unit at about 2.2k plus the electronics and a battery. I actually think I'd take the rear drive and.turn in 90, feed two smaller diffs front and rear and go AWD from a single motor.