360° animations and more pictures, going back years: http://www.eternalmachinery.com/ecar/
I'm very interested in feedback / suggestions.
Take a T bucket, remove the bucket body, add two seats straddling the drive shaft, add a very simple minimal body, replace the ladder frame with a space frame.
My goal is a very fun near daily driver. No plans to race anything competitively, but I'd have to try drag street nights and autocrossing occasionally.
Yes, it's snug. I'm planning to mock it up to verify my girlfriend and I fit, and I can see, before building. I really like the idea of the symmetry / balance of sitting in the middle. Not having to make front suspension uneven to compensate for uneven weight = traction on the rear tires to get it to go straight when mashing the throttle, with such a light car.
I'm planning to weld everything myself, which should be neat, since I've never welded. So step one is buy a welder and practice a lot. Which welder should I buy? I realize this is a very ambitious project, likely to take years, and less ambitious projects often are not completed. I'm up for doing it wrong the first time. I got time.
I've tried to balance the weight of the engine, driver, gas, and battery, between the axles, with equal size tires all around, in hopes of being able to turn well.
I'm thinking third generation Chevy Camaro donor, manual transmission. 305 (5.0L), and T5 transmission (plus an LSD eventually). Because I think this would be way less expensive than a 350 and T56, and I think this should give me plenty of power to weight. Others have guessed 1500 pounds total weight (id' like more guesses), 10 pounds per hp seems great, and 150 hp seems easy to get out of a 305. My Honda CBR1100XX is 563 pounds wet and 164 horse power = 3.4 pounds per hp, which I think gives me a good appreciation of "it's more fun to drive a slow car fast than to drive a fast car slow". I'm not complaining, I'm very thankful I get to have this bike, but I also like getting to open the throttle more often. I had great fun wringing the crap out of my first car, an '88 Tempo. My '98 M3 is 14 pounds per hp, and fun.
I'm planning to remove the ECM and replace the carb and distributor with ones that don't need the ECM. Because I've had enough electrical problems, and would like to try mechanical ones for a change. Same reason I'm not going for an LS engine.
I'm planning to use square tube for the frame. The model is based on 1.375" = 3.4cm wide tube, which came from the SCCA roll cage requirement for cars up to 1700 pounds with round tube. I'd like to know what square tube is as strong as round tube that wide (0.080" wall thickness). It looks like my motor mount situation should be similar enough to locosts that I should be able to get away with 1" square tube (two tubes per side supporting the motor mounts, one straight, one diagonal brace).
I think the type of welding I want to do is TIG?
Live rear axle (from donor), dual wishbone + push rod front, fabricating the wishbones, push rods, etc., myself. I'm not excited about calculating roll centers. Hopefully using all the knuckles/spindles and brakes from the donor. Mounting fenders to the knuckles via existing (dust cover?) bolt holes. Would it be a terrible idea to use a single coilover for the front suspension? Push rods -> rockers -> single coilover, equivalent to a perfectly solid sway bar?
I live in New Hampshire, and I'm planning to register this as a reconstructed / homemade vehicle. Which requires fenders and bumpers and a front license plate. And, if I understand correctly, at least a 20 year old engine to get rid of the electronics (OBD) requirements. Still working out what I want to do about bumpers, maybe Model T style, interested in suggestions (the exact requirements seem to be undefined, and extremely minimal).
New Hampshire law is here: http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/rules/state_agencies/saf-c3200.html
Probably typical T bucket exhaust. "Classic T-bucket headers" look about right. They're a few inches too wide, so maybe I'll get them unfinished, cut, and re-weld them, then have them coated?
Shoebox problem of space frame design: A shoebox is structurally sound until you take the lid off. The top of the box with the lid off is similar to the un-triangulated rectangle that often occurs around the people. I'm thinking of trying to solve this problem with gussets, resulting in an oval shaped hole for the people, around shoulder height. The inside edge of those gussets is shown in blue in my models. I'm curious why I haven't found others doing this.
I do my rendering in blender, which is free. I wish solidworks wasn't $4,000.
I live in Pelham NH, if you'd like a hand wrenching or whatever some time, I'd like to get to know more people who do these things. I'm about 40 minutes North of greater Boston, which I go to all the time. And let me know if you hear of a good donor?
I think I want to get in and out of the car by hinging the canopy at the firewall, and putting the back seam at the rear roll bar. Also hinge the hood at the firewall, and make the top and sides of the body forward of the firewall all one piece (except for a bit around the wishbones) for easy access under the hood. Complete flat bottom for the whole car? I'm planning to add a transmission tunnel, of course, not in the model yet.
I'm curious what I'd need to do different to meet SCCA cage requirements, not because I'm planning to race, but because I might as well try to build a decent cage if I'm close: "No alternate roll hoop will be considered unless
it contains a main hoop having a minimum tubing size of 1.375” x .080” wall thickness. The roll bar
must be capable of withstanding the following stress loading applied simultaneously to the top of the
roll bar: 1.5 (X) laterally, 5.5 (X) longitudinally in both the fore and aft directions, and 7.5 (X) vertically,
where (X) = the minimum weight of the car."