Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
The Ecobeamer
Collapse
X
-
For folks that see your wheel well cover I'd strongly suggest reusing the original steel wheel well and making some filet cuts/flanges to allow it to fit the hole. Works well, and is a lot stronger than AL. Only downside is that you may need a bit of seam sealer to finish the filet gaps.
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
I cut out some really thin aluminum sheet for the wheel well
this angle aluminum crossmember will prevent it from sagging and flexing a ton and will provide me a place to have my final exhaust hanger mount too
rivet from the bottom
finished result
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by LowR3V'in View Postbig brakes are a absolutely must have i've learned that x20
some people don't get it fast cars get to 100 like nothing then you have to stop.
Do acouple of those back to back stock brakes even with "race" pads turn to cream cheese.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by moatilliatta View PostI don’t mind the rivits and not hating. I don’t see it being a benefit unless using aluminum that’s hard to weld or will crack from being welded..
Just I consider a component ground to chassis something that should use a removable fastener.
My extent knowledge is using pop rivits, if you don’t have a flat surface and good clamping area with a washer on the back side in sheet metal / soft metal they seem to come loose. Maybe because I use the aluminum rivits?
the other bit is any air gaps, fire will find its way right thru.
I have a project with a flat bottom floor out of t6 aluminum that will be riveted, but also panel bonded..
I know formula cars are riveted.. but not sure the rivets they use..
Does the Flickr photos not work for you?
I cant recall seeing a rivet coming loose and I can tell you ive whipped the other race car/hot rod that I built from a bare frame myself pretty good, and as per the manufacturers instructions it is build using hundreds of rivets holding it together, far more than on the ecobeamer. never used a washer on the back end either but that seems like a smart idea for better clamping if its a critical area with a lot of flex.
Factory Five Racing roadster with a 347 stroker SBF and the same model TKO-500 im using in the ecobeamer:
allot of what I do with the ecobeamer is inspired or learned from when I built that cobra. they are actually pretty similar cars in allot of ways, they will have similar power to weight ratios and kinda close curb weights but I think the ecobeamer will be more hard core because it doesn't have 315's on the rear, only 205s or 215s lol
call me a ricer but im just hoping that ecoboost will spit some flames like the cobra
cant see your flicker images
Leave a comment:
-
big brakes are a absolutely must have i've learned that x20
some people don't get it fast cars get to 100 like nothing then you have to stop.
Do acouple of those back to back stock brakes even with "race" pads turn to cream cheese.
Leave a comment:
-
Can not believe this project is moving this fast
I like the rivots ; looks industrial cool
post audio of it running
want to hear that exhaust note
Leave a comment:
-
Bro you're absolutely flying on this project, props for sure. Sent from my SM-G973U1 using Tapatalk
Leave a comment:
-
I don’t mind the rivits and not hating. I don’t see it being a benefit unless using aluminum that’s hard to weld or will crack from being welded..
Just I consider a component ground to chassis something that should use a removable fastener.
My extent knowledge is using pop rivits, if you don’t have a flat surface and good clamping area with a washer on the back side in sheet metal / soft metal they seem to come loose. Maybe because I use the aluminum rivits?
the other bit is any air gaps, fire will find its way right thru.
I have a project with a flat bottom floor out of t6 aluminum that will be riveted, but also panel bonded..
I know formula cars are riveted.. but not sure the rivets they use..
Does the Flickr photos not work for you?
Leave a comment:
-
There is a big chance of you completing this build in less than 3 months and me being heavily impressed. The latter already happened though.
Leave a comment:
-
got the downpipe and o2 sensor installed, major pain to bolt it up because there's not much room.
pulled the rear subframe and bolted up the driveshaft and trailing arms and then reinstalled it.
then for fun I bolt up my brakes to see if the caliper will fit my wheels. my brake setup is the Ireland engineering 310mm 6/4 piston big brake kit, I haven't mentioned that yet or talked about brakes much but you gotta have good stopping power for a car like this.
im going to have to roll my fenders, thats no big deal. if the paint gets messed up I just spray over the cracked parts lol. racing seats came in today, i got sparco f200s, they fit me perfectly, I really dislike the fabric they are made out of but that's no big deal.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by moatilliatta View PostYou riveted the fuel pump ground? Haha!
Have you used rivnuts?
Thread is motivating for me to get some progress done!
I have never used a rivnut, I never even knew about them until recently.
that's good man, I like that. progress feels good. ive checked out your entropy build thread and cant see much because I don't have flickr.
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: