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#71 | |
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I will say this though...I have noticed when lifting the car on my lift, I use blocks of wood under the jack points so the car is lifted by the jack points and not some other part on the car where the lift pad happens to be. Sometimes this makes one corner of the car higher than the other corners depending on which part of the lift arm the block of wood is placed. As the car is lifted eventually all four corners are resting on the blocks of wood on the lift. Other cars I’ve lifted in this manner(uneven lift points) resulted in one corner of the car not actually resting on one of the lift arms. Not a scientific test at all but it ssems to me that this chassis does flex or twist...wether or not it matters or is being stressed as intended I don’t know. I’ll report back with my own findings once my build is complete and I’ve put it through its paces. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to ILLSMOQ For This Useful Post: | venturaII (12-21-2017) |
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#72 |
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| The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Skeneypoo For This Useful Post: | B T (01-16-2018), DAEMANO (01-16-2018), ILLSMOQ (12-21-2017), strat61caster (12-21-2017), Summerwolf (12-23-2017) |
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#73 |
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Ever seen the movement of a dial indicator rigged up against the chassis floor in an E46 M3? That excessive movement is fixable by adding rigidity to just one section of the chassis.
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#74 | |
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So, cage not needed. Curious what quantifiable improvement that extra rigidity nets, besides NVH...
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| The Following User Says Thank You to venturaII For This Useful Post: | Ultramaroon (12-21-2017) |
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#75 |
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#76 |
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The subframe rotates and displaces less, so a few suspension joints experience less drivetrain torque related displacement, the diff stays more aligned with the driveshaft, and the chassis floor connected to the subframe will have more resistance to tearing away from the rest of the chassis. Also, E46 sedans with a fixed back seat are about 50% stiffer than a E46 sedan with fold down seats, so it's clear some rigidity is lost with fold down seats. A rear strut/subframe brace, while not quite a fixed back seat panel, is a structural modification in an area that is known to be a weak spot on another car. I don't know how much power is needed for chassis tears to become a problem on the 86, but the E46 was very weak. It is expensive to quantify those things with testing, but the fundamentals on how and why it works are sound. NVH can increase but it's probably not a big consideration for the people who are looking at reinforcement as a need (+500 lb-ft or w/e, not sure what the number is) and not a luxury.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to gtengr For This Useful Post: | ILLSMOQ (12-21-2017) |
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#77 |
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For reasons of durability/strength (which also translate to safety..), I don't really dispute the gains. But unless someone is running aluminum or delrin bushings EVERYWHERE, any additional stiffness in the chassis would be negligible compared to the amount of deflection added up elsewhere in the suspension, so there's little to gain, performance wise in any vehicle except a max-effort track car where chassis deflection really becomes the LAST area that needs to be changed; the nth degree. It's only coincidental that cages are added earlier in the build process in response to safety requirements.
I was close to an E36 M3 purchase before finding my FRS, so having done the research on them as well as having a few friends who track and autocross theirs, I'm familiar with the E46 and E36's shortcomings in the rear suspension area. I'm not aware of ANY areas on the 86 where chassis strength is even remotely as frail as that. Driveline components can be brittle, but a cage won't resolve that...
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#78 |
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#79 |
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#80 | |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to gtengr For This Useful Post: | ILLSMOQ (12-21-2017) |
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#81 |
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True. However, that is going to be one heavy and intrusive rollcage if it's going to be used to reinforce every suspension and subframe pick up point on the body. It'll definitely look racecar..
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#82 | |
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As far as a roll cage, a half cage is fine on the street and no you dont need to wear a helmet....just make sure you use your 5 point harness. Last edited by cf6mech; 12-23-2017 at 05:43 AM. |
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#83 |
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I’m not sure people realize the LS is a very light engine. Around 450 lbs compared to about 480 lbs on the FA20. Yeah the FA20 sits lower but the bottom end of an LS would be where the bulk of the weight would be. I’m sure the CG would take a hit but I seriously doubt it would turn it into a tank.
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#84 | |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to ILLSMOQ For This Useful Post: | cf6mech (12-23-2017) |
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