Bob da builder
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| posted on 30/7/04 at 04:08 PM |
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mini project?
hey up
well the locost is finished and im getting itchy fingers again for a project. the next one will be a mini!
want to do either a paul banham roadster (chop the roof off) or a z-cars bike engine conversion. the aim is to get it into a magazine (you gota have
hope!) coz i failed with the locost!! so i reckonb the best way is to combine both for nutz speed and cool looks!!
the problem is that the z-cars conversion mounts the engine in the rear within a roll cage (hum... rear wheel drive mini....  ) and the banham kit
reinforces the cills so im concerned that the two will clash and i dont want a roll cage and no roof, not the look im after (will have cobra hoops)
so my question is does any one know of a way / kit to fit a bike enging in the front of a mini???
i want to keep to the locost ethics of makeing as much as poss for two reasons, personal pride in my car and im not loaded with cash!!! (unless i sold
the locost but that aint gona happen... well not till i do another 7!)
cheers for your time
bob 
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phelpsa
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| posted on 30/7/04 at 04:46 PM |
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Z-cars put bike engines in the front o a mini too, using the standard diff with a cog bolted to it.
Adam
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derf
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| posted on 30/7/04 at 05:14 PM |
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if you really want to go wild, there is a hyandai tiburan running around maryland (US) with twin ethanol powered engine (one front, one back),
it's a completelly seperate 4wd system, the guy makes some serious acceleration times, and imagine dropping one engine in revers and the other
in drive and flooring it, you get some real wacky burnouts.
SCC sport compact car gross display of HP contest
quote:
The rules were straightforward: There were none. Contenders were told to show us what they had and they would be scored completely subjectively as our
judges saw fit. This contest produced huge, smoky burnouts, giant powerslides and donuts galore. It also produced the most impressive burnout ever put
rubber on tarmac. Michael McIntyre's twin-engine Hyundai put 627 hp to the ground in our dyno competition. It did the same thing here--in a
completely different way. McIntyre's car uses two independently controlled automatic transmissions, giving him the ability to operate them in
drive and reverse at the same time--which is exactly what he did. The resulting automotive tug of war was enough to send any chassis engineer into
convulsions.
With the front tranny in reverse and the rear in drive, McIntyre laid into the go pedal and didn't lift until he'd made enough tire smoke
to put California's Air Resources Board on high alert. The car began to slowly rotate on its axis as all four drive wheels fought each other for
dynamic control. In about 10 seconds, the entire car was engulfed. When it was over, the ground was covered with smoldering piles of rubber and the
most confused burnout marks ever made. He won. No one else even came close.
Other high points include a painfully risky reverse burnout by Steve Mitchell in the Sentra and MotoRex's Justin Sykes wearing a huge afro wig
for the Skyline's smoky display. The Z, Supra and MR2 also produced huge clouds of tire smoke, but nothing--and we mean nothing--measured up to
the standard set by the little Korean car with two engines.
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richardR1
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| posted on 30/7/04 at 07:44 PM |
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Chris at Z Cars did the engineering on my mates rally Mini. Runs an R1 in the front and is RWD. Was the first Mini he ever did. Let me know if you
want any more info.
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bald_ade
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| posted on 31/7/04 at 01:28 PM |
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bob here under bald ade`s login!!
will be giving z-cars a shout in the near future!! i think that there will be a new project looming very soon!!!
cheers for the advice guys
well the sun is out so its play time in the locost!!!       
bob
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