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Team Idris

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Posts posted by Team Idris

  1. Yay, I figured it out :)

    I have been thinking about it for ten years, but I couldn’t get a workable ‘tube run’ that missed everything.  

    The idea is that a big roll feeds the mass of the engine and front axel into the roll bar. The bar has a bend so it isn’t a pokey shock load on the front hoop. Trees will ride over the cage better. The outriggers have less to do, as does the bolted in cross member that ties them together. 

    The chassis section can be reduced to bend the radius arm away from the tyre. (Max steering travel without wide rims and spacers)

    554B0E85-FF76-4285-9E68-B773A54F4F90.jpeg

  2. 19 hours ago, Jamie_grieve said:

    Will you be ditching the alrc rules and competition altogether? If so, would you not be better off starting from scratch with a tube frame and transfer all the bits over to it?
    I've been cursing working round a chassis after recently starting work on an off roader based on a Volvo C304. I said to myself I'd never build another buggy again with a chassis when I built my last one, this was meant to be a quick scrapheap challenge type build that's now grown legs and I'm regretting it already. Every time I look at it and think of the time I've wasted and compromises I've made instead of just sitting everything on sand bags where I want it and join the dots with tube. That said, I haven't owned it for long, that thing of yours is almost like a pet the time you've had it, would be a bit like shooting  your dog if you broke it.

    Sort story :D

    me and dad bought it in 1991, started it in 1992 and finished it in 1995, in his proper wide garage with a pit. Plenty of room to work on this one while racing it and starting on the next.

    he moved :o

    Not the end of the world for me though, because a lot of normal bits fit. I even used the original rangy bulkhead and tunnel to save time and use easily available bits. (Column and brakes).

    What I loose in performance I gain in availability :) it mostly only stopped due to cash flow while at university.

    • Like 1
  3. 1 hour ago, Arjan said:

    Very interesting !

    Yes, a most interesting mechanical puzzle. Will the rope go over the big 1972 box-section centre cross-member or will I have to ‘tube’ that as well?

    It is too close to call just looking at it. Too much radiator pipe covers to see the front tube from the back.

    Excited to find out :) 

    Front donut will be a Goodwinch roller fairlead stainless-tube that is lobster cut into a circle. I can’t find anything to buy?

  4. It is all a wiggle and a challenge to fit Jamie, but:

    I can get the battery under the drivers seat with 100mm below the floor line and 100mm above. All I have to miss is the rear donut mount.

    I shouldn’t need two batteries for its next perceived race work, so the second battery gets removed.

    It smells like the back is going to loose about 6” in length? Quarter pipe cross member moves up as well as forward.

    All that moving around puts the front winch mount as far back as possible, just behind the centre line of the rear axel on the left hand side, but still inside the LH chassis rail.

    The rear winch rope may have to pass over front winch motor?

    The fuel tank also goes up and forward :o

    The front rope then has 2 foot to self reeve before it passes through the big square central crossmember. If that hole is a tube-slot it gets more free movement.

     

    Aim: get the back axel load heavier than the front, ditch the ALRC silhouette, reduce weight globally and make the front as light as possible so it kicks over terrain rather than ploughing in.

    I want my cake and eat it :D

     

    • Like 1
  5. They have some at rakeway, but they are large top-rope-line ones. So really my plan is to wait a bit and fabricate a steel one or turn out an ally one.

    Or go insane and get an SS one made :)

    I figured it was the easy part compared to the stuff at the other end of the tube, which will be tricky and a half. 

    Also, love your truck :D

  6. Oooh, good question :)

    It is as steep as it can feasibly be before I can’t see the front edge. You could call it a negative-virtual-lift, because the engine sits much higher in a Range Rover classic than in a series one Landy. Folk normally jack the body up to allow for the wheel movement, but It was never able to take the bonnet in the normal position and last time I needed more space I gave it the full lift.

    the gauges are now along its back edge. They are outside the cab area.

    • Like 1
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