As far as I know most sports cars from Ferrari, Lamborghini have used round tube in their spaceframes.
Which other sports cars have used square tubing?
Are square tubing and its welds THAT weak compared to round tube?
Would gusseting make joints at least as strong as those in round tubing?
the reason that for the weight round tubing has a higher torsional stiffness - its a weight saving thing principally
Square tubing also makes it easier for us to rivet on panels without having to form the ali over round rails first.
Strength doesn't really come into it - round tubes of the same "strength" are lighter than square ones, but square tubes are much easier to join at angles than round ones as the round ones need "fish-mouthing" making it tricky for amateurs to construct. The fabrication issues don't really matter in a factory environment but weight does hence their use of round tubes.
Remeber that guy who popped up and said we were all doing it wrong with 1" tubing and we should all be building chassis with 4" diameter round. Oddly he doesnt appear to have built anything as yet.
quote:
Originally posted by Not Anumber
Remeber that guy who popped up and said we were all doing it wrong with 1" tubing and we should all be building chassis with 4" diameter round. Oddly he doesnt appear to have built anything as yet.
I know we are digressing but I'm sure I saw posts on this site with calculations that showed a ladder chassis (i.e. 4" round tubes) if
properly designed was as stiff as the locost chassis.
As said above not so easy to hang stuff off though
Cheers!
[Edited on 14-3-14 by v8kid]
quote:
Originally posted by chrism
quote:
Originally posted by Not Anumber
Remeber that guy who popped up and said we were all doing it wrong with 1" tubing and we should all be building chassis with 4" diameter round. Oddly he doesnt appear to have built anything as yet.
Didn't/Doesn't one of the cobra replicas use a tube chassis with 2 x 4" diameter tubes forming the backbone, I seem to remember reading about it years ago.
Thinking about it doesnt the MNR chassis use round tubing instead of square.
[Edited on 14/3/14 by chrism]
quote:
Originally posted by v8kid
I know we are digressing but I'm sure I saw posts on this site with calculations that showed a ladder chassis (i.e. 4" round tubes) if properly designed was as stiff as the locost chassis.
As said above not so easy to hang stuff off though
Cheers!
[Edited on 14-3-14 by v8kid]
My single seater racing car is constructed from square tubing, my mates, same year, different manufacturer, round tubing. both about the same weight. My Turner sports car has 2 x 3" round tubes running front to back in the form of a ladder chassis...So did A.C and lots of others.....
IIRC when Marcos stopped using the wooden chassis, they used square steel tube.
quote:
Originally posted by ceebmoj
Cymtriks seems to have a number of posts along those lines. I think his caveats where along the lines that its much harder to design a proper space frame that a ladder chassis and most kitcars are a long way from a proper space frame and also there are benefits to mounting and protection that come from space frames.
quote:
Originally posted by ceebmojmaybe he is about to make the point.
Karts are ladder frames aren't they? They don't seem to be sh1te and are quite quick
oops forgot to mention the whole unrelated point - they are made from round tube!
[Edited on 18-3-14 by v8kid]
Karts are not really ladder frames, no.
quote:
Originally posted by chrism
Didn't/Doesn't one of the cobra replicas use a tube chassis with 2 x 4" diameter tubes forming the backbone, I seem to remember reading about it years ago.
Thinking about it doesnt the MNR chassis use round tubing instead of square.
[Edited on 14/3/14 by chrism]
Not only Cobra replicas but the original A.C Ace cars from which they derived had a ladder chassis with 2 large tubes.....
quote:
Originally posted by coyoteboy
Karts are not really ladder frames, no.
quote:
Originally posted by v8kid
quote:
Originally posted by coyoteboy
Karts are not really ladder frames, no.
How would you describe them? I can't think of anything else offhand.
quote:
Originally posted by v8kid
Karts are ladder frames aren't they? They don't seem to be sh1te and are quite quick
quote:
Originally posted by Ivan
Nearly all Cobra chassis...
If I recall my one's chassis weighs about 90 lbs so they aren't ridiculously heavy either ...
quote:
Originally posted by Sam_68
quote:
Originally posted by Ivan
Nearly all Cobra chassis...
If I recall my one's chassis weighs about 90 lbs so they aren't ridiculously heavy either ...
Really?!
That's 41 kilos?
Bearing in mind that a typical Westfield spaceframe weighs about 68 kilos and even the featherweight carbon fibre monocoque tub of the Westfield FW400 was quoted as 45 kilos, I find that figure surprising, to say the least!
41 kilos is into pick-it-up-with-one-hand territory?