particularly this one
20171231_132007 by Michael Crawford, on Flickr
20171231_132029 by Michael Crawford, on Flickr
spec miata main hoop segment, 2000 miata if you needed to know.
this is a challenge car, but im building in maximum safety . its a thing i have....
anyway, i learned about the absolute pain in the dick of a fully welded, door bar equipped cage with the AMC. that car was never destined for anything but competition, so i dealt with it. made everything 100 times ore difficult after it went in though. always in the way.
my daily has a hard dog ace in it. a bolt in. that still in the way for a lot of various service procedures. the challenge car will have essentially a radically overcomplicated hard dog sport. with extra tubes. as you can see in the picture (yes, no rear downtubes yet, as i haven't made them. they will go as far rearward as i feel comfortable with going and still being able to have some sort of top. im hoping to land them after the rear strut mounts.)
anyway, this thing needs feet made first and foremost. the hard dog has roughly 6 inch wide plates under the main hoop that go way down the rear bulkhead to clear a boxed section for the body, and bolt in there. they use some sore of backer plate on the other side. same way with the rear downtubes. plates under the body that are cut to clear the body.
i have no qualms about cutting things in this car. or welding. but i want to be able to remove the bar for service fairly easily.
my thought was to make a 1/8 steel plate that going into the hole where the seatbelt reel used to live and down the body about 10 inches. that would make it roughly a 12x6 solid plate. weld a few grade 8 1/2 nuts to this plate, and weld the plate to the body. make a corresponding plate welded to the main hoop feet with holes in it to put bolts through. in addition, weld a tab to the hoop that bolts to the seatbelt tower where the factory seatbelt guide mounted. i would also weld the seatbelt towers completely after cutting my clearance notches and such in to make them as strong as possible.
rear downtube feet would be done the same.
but i question if this is the right approach. all the bolt in bars have the factory floor sandwiched, with a bigger plate on the interior side, and a smaller on the underside, and then use a nylock nut and bolt through. im uncertain if this is a safety reason, or an install reason, or both. may even have a touch of manufacturing reasoning.
what are the thoughts of you guys? is this a good approach? would it pass tech for SCCA autocross, NHRA 11.99 and quicker, and possible HPDE in the future?
too long didn't read: can i weld a 1/8 plate to the floor with captured nuts, make a similar plate welded to the roll bar, and bolt the thing in and pass tech/not die?