Have spent some time lurking here admiring the quality of people's skills and their projects so here's a humble contribution from Ireland with my latest project:
My Dad was getting rid of this very ropey Smart Roadster with engine woes and generally in a sorry state, and in a weaker moment I decide to turn it in to a track day project. I'm aiming to make it as quick as I can by making it as light as I can, and as cheaply as I can. And I do mean cheaply. The engine isn't running and the gearboxes really don't suit track days so a bike engine it is. There's a bit of work needed before we get to that though.
Looking at it, it's a targa and the windscreen seems to add very little to torsional rigidity, so a very quick check on headroom:
and after some sparks and loud noises it becomes a speedster:
Excellent. No glass, bin the wipers and wiper motor and washer bottle, much lightness, and there's a touch of Lotus 3-Eleven/McLaren Elva vibes going on. If you're drunk and squint at it. I need to add strength in, so the doors are scrapped in favour of door bars, which the plastic door skin will bolt to. More triangulation will naturally be added here later, along with roll over protection of some description:
The servo is junked for a single master cylinder. Yes I know this isn't ideal but remember: light and cheap. I've never heard of these failing (had bother with one where the domed retaining washer was fitted backwards, that was no fun to diagnose) so I'm risking having only the one. Please don't judge me:
There's a bias valve to be fitted to the rear, installed under the bonnet in case anyone decides it'd be funny to move the lever when it's parked up:
The throttle pedal is fly by wire so no use really, so making a quick jig:
I made up a pedal using the existing bracket, and a relatively simple cable should do the trick from here.
Got a cheap and cheerful steering wheel with a removable boss, and machined the boss to fit over the standard splines. I plan on getting someone who can weld better than I can to weld this up for me! The plan is to slot the boss so that the weld isn't just circular around the column but travels up along the boss too:
I'm a little bit ahead of this with progress so will posts more updates shortly.