Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

The no-cas arm is a rear toe arm from S13/S14 which has a very similar rear suspension. So similar that one of the bolt holes for it is actually on the GTR subframe. We added a bracket so that it was supported from both sides for extra strength, but it is only in that spot temporarily. Once everything is in a a good ride height is set we will do the full bump steer measurements and move the inner end of the arm up or down as required - we have a couple of cm we can go either way

.

Any news on finalising the best point? Looking to get a rear GTR cradle sorted for my bus.

yeah....what brad said lol...

final mounting points is the last piece of geometery about 2 mins before it hits the track. We know the inner end is in the right area so we will measure and adjust when the time comes.

about time you put some gtr bits in your car troy....do you want to buy a gtr sump we have about 20 lol.

hey Duncan have u managed to weld around the entire join of every rollcage pipe? the ones for the front strut towers look pretty close to the gaurds that welding around the side and underneath would be nearly impossible? also the ones coming from the main hoop bottom to the rear strut tower point look to be tough to access also? i assume they were bars all added in last once the main hoop was finished and welded up in position?

one other question, i want to sit the front legs coming from the A pillars hard onto the side of the sill (well hard onto the base plate bent up the sill), and weld up the side of them, is this allowed if i have the base plate bent to go up the sill and on the floor area, as welding around the sill side will be tough and if i leave enough room to weld then its gonna be a fair distance off the A pillars which i dont want also. Head clearance is not the greatest im gonna have to lower the seat as it is and im pretty short.

Edited by unique1

yeah I will have to leave Mark to confirm the exact technique because I made excuses to be somewhere else every time there was a nasty welding job to do. In fact I'd rather scrape out tar using a heat gun than weld up the cage

but the trick is, front and rear you put the bottom of the cage on little pedastal say 10cm high. they go in last so you can drop the whole cage 10cm from the roof to get the clearance to weld. Even so many of the places are a disaster to get into, and yes you definately need 100% welded. Some other guys cut a hole in the floor and let the cage drop down to the ground while welding - then weld a plate back over the hole later

no worries mate, yer i have cut the holes to drop the hoop down and hoop is setup and front legs are pretty much sorted i am just worried about specific rules with the position of the front leg and can it be welded up the sill, i got a pic ill post to show u what i mean...

the plate spacing the leg off the sill isnt the plate i will use so dont mind the bend in it thats just to get it spaced off the 3mm or whatever the plate is gonna be. Ill have a 3mm plate on the floor and 3mm plate up the sill too for extra strength. I am just trying to avoid leaving a 20mm gap up the sill area to weld right around as it then brings the legs too far off the pillar and effects head room. Ive read through the CAMS rulebook 20 times and cant find if its ok or not.

post-40430-1238669073_thumb.jpg post-40430-1238669448_thumb.jpg

Edited by unique1

ahh I see. well actually no bracing to the chasis is mentioned in the CAMs book, I was just talking about what people do in practice. The only thing CAMS covers is the requirments for reinforcing where it is mounted. so....weld away!

that front leg looks nice and close, is that the real position or just temporary. We normally end up with it a little further away and just use plates from the leg to the chasis to support it

Yer thats in the position it will be mounted its a well made kit actually i bought from Rod Andrews Race Cars and got it sent here, the hoop is touching just below both seatbelt mounting spots on the B pillars which is perfect and the front leg bars are spot on and only about 10mm or so away from the A pillars at the middle of the pillars, the point where the A pillar meets the roof is about 2mm away and as close as it could get everywhere else. I havent mounted any of the other bars yet but it seems like a good deal for $800 for the lot and its CAMS and ANDRA approved design so thats a bonus. Its all CDS as i was told CM is alot of work to get past CAMS without alot of extra expense.

does Mark visit the forums often? i wouldnt mind some info on the question about accessing the welds on the difficult spots and what order to do some of the barwork going into the engine bay strut towers etc.

post-40430-1238757085_thumb.jpg

I'm here, though not often enough for my liking. Damn work gets in the way.

As to welding the A pillar bars to the floor, I ran with 2 plates perpendicular on the floor and sides, like a bit of v channel, but wider and then welded as much as I could with the mig. There's probably a patch about a cm wide which can't be welded on the base if you run the bars right up against the side, but in my case, I ran a thick weld up the bar attaching the bar to the side which more than compensated.

With the main hoop, you should be able to weld all the way around. If you can't, move it or bend it in a bit so that you can.

With all the other bars, I was able to weld all the way around with the exception of one little spot on the rear strut towers. But here again, it's attached to a plate and the plate is welded all arond and the bar is welded so strongly to the plate that it's not a problem.

Rule of thumb is weld as much as humanly possible, but having a spot unweleded is not the end of the world. Before I get harrassed by everyone for saying it, my last cage built by Bond roll bars didn't have the top of the main hoop to rear strut towers welded at the main hoop and it worked fine. I only discovered it after smashing the car and removing the roof.

Last bit of advice, from your picture you've got a bar clamp holding the A pillar bar in place. Make sure that the bar clamp is not forcing the bar in place. It should sit naturally in place. If not, bend it a little until it does. It should not be under strain beforehand. Not absolutlely sure of the mechanics, but the cage builder I was working with was adament that it should not be under strain.

Thanks for the reply and advice Mark, i have only got that clamp holding the pipe up so it doesnt fall over while its sitting there (unwelded at the moment), its naturally gonna sit in that position which is good. I am able to access around the hoop no probs, its just the front engine bay strut tower ones and a couple of extra bars i was thinking would be tough to access with the mig.

so do u weld the front legs/hoop/rear sections in completely and then add in the bars from the front legs to the rear of the engine bay strut towers last of all?

also a different question for you guys regarding the mounting of the drivers seat... did u have to remove that factory braced section that runs across the floor on both sides of the gearbox tunnel to lower the drivers seat lower? its gonna be right in the way i think as head room is not the greatest with a helmet on.

well actually....we haven't really resolved the seat mounting yet. Both Mark and I are not short and have troubles in our other cars with helmets banging on roll cages. the problem is the seat needs to slide so whatever we come up with has to utilise rails.

so at the moment it is using bride rail bolted into the stock mounting points. we also didn't put a diagonal in the roof section to keep good clearance.

Sitting in Adelaide airport lounge with flight about to be called any moment, so if this post get's interrupted, I'll continue later.

Procedure is to locate main hoop with base plates or triangles, a pillar bars and the bar crossing the top of the windscreen (I strongly recommend you bend this bar at both ends to put it up to the room and out of the way as much as possible.

Tack weld it in a few places, then when you are happy with it, cut the tacks for the main hoop and drop the bar so that you can get to the top seams. Weld everything that will be hard to get to and then put the main hoop back in place and weld it all in place.

From here on in, tack everything. Don't weld it all up unless you wont be able to get to it again because of another bar. You will find that there are a lot of places, particularly in the rear where multiple bars meet. Only weld it once everything is in place or you will have welds on top of welds which will weaken it and make it harder to cut the bars.

Make sure all your bars fit without bashing them into place and if you are using Chromoly, make sure to tig weld as much as possible as mig makes the bars brittle.

As for the front bars, no way around it, it's a pain in the ass. I used a plasma to cut little holes then ran a string line to center it, cutting little bits away as necessary until the string did not foul on anything. Then using the string as a center I cut a hole just about the right size. Lots of trial and error and plates to cover the holse back up. Welding was hard and mostly done with the mig.

Hope it helps.

mark

thats great help Mark, i got instructions with the kit on order of doing things so most is explained it was just at what stage to do those engine bay bars i was unsure of. I have that top of windscreen bar in the kit and it is bent on both ends which is a good idea by the sounds of it. The whole lot is CDS so mig is what im using as we just bought a brand new machine to do the job.

Well i guess its a matter of getting stuck in now, over the easter weekend we will get a fair bit done i hope and then i can focus on some other stuff and get this thing running :P

sorry for filling the thread with unrelated info to your project too!

Edited by unique1
  • 3 months later...

NOTE:

You may have noticed this thread has been moved.

SAU Admin have decided to run a new section for "Projects, Overhauls and Build-ups"

As such your thread is a prime example of what we wanted to house in this section.

We have left links in the sections you originally posted also to allow easy access to the threads new home.

Any issues, please feel free to pm myself or N1GTR.

Cheers Col

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Hey guys! Y'all are the masters so figured I'd check in on a few items here. - My engine sounds ever-so-slightly more raspy than the other NA RB25s I've listened to. It's barely noticeable but definitely a slightly different sound. - When I back off the throttle at high RPM, I will sometimes get a pop out of the exhaust, assuming this can be diagnosed as misfire. Some history on the car: - Had an exhaust leak in auction sheet but was claimed to be fixed by seller (bought from USA importer).  - Car's coil packs and sparks were replaced when it was sold to me, but unsure on what the gap is and whether the coil packs are correct.  - A prior mechanic had misdiagnosed a pilot or throwout bearing sound as LSPI/detonation. Had played with timing a bit, pops/raspy sound of engine just got worse. Got timing reset. - Had failed emissions a few times. First time went in as is, failed. Second time, replaced cat, still failed, running rich as hell. Third time replaced o2 sensor, passed. Car still smells gassy though. - Timing belt and valve cover gasket also replaced.  - Gas mileage is... low. about 350-400K per tank.  Any idea if I'm having any serious issues here or does this all sound like normal old NA RB stuff and I'm fine to drive it with the pops/slightly raspy engine? If it'll help, I can get drop a video of the sound of the engine.
    • So....to find any R chassis part number, get your VIN (will be something like ER33-xxxxxx for you) and go to: https://www.amayama.com/en/genuine-catalogs/nissan and enter it. From there you have access to a web version of Nissan's part system, FAST. It is a bit tricky to get used to, so maybe have a shot and post up what you think.  You can also search by general model but note in some cases your car might have different options so VIN is safest.  On diagram 211 I got 14075-75T16 for Connector, Water Hose If I search for part 14053‑21U10 that you posted, that is also a water hose but not the one bolted to the plenum and 14075‑04U00 is the fitting where the water hose goes into the block.
    • Yeah now we are talking I much prefer coolers in the front middle because it lessens the chance of a small bump to a corner stopping the whole event. I was thinking the AT cooler can move out of the radiator, delete the AT/engine coolant interwarmer and mount a separate cooler with a thermoswitch somewhere further back as is common in racing, that would be one thing. Beyond that, the engine oil cooler is an obvious one to move to the wheel arch, potentially one on each side, but unused space is an issue. I did have a earlier pic with the bumper off but it doesn't show how busy the corners are: DS is full of the auto driving sensors and PS is totally fully of windscreen washer fluid reservoir But ultimately I was hoping to keep the AC, and the water/air heat exchanger is fundamental so it is not just the radiator that needs to be in front BTW here's airflow to the rad as it ran at the track (one horn is gone now and I'll remove the lights next time):
    • your right the maps for Australia came out in 2017 but are 2010 maps. i got the updated maps SD card put it in and it was the same. Same maps in my Brothers Nissan Patrol. 2020 i think his car is
×
×
  • Create New...