crankshaft Aaron Gibson Super Moderator Location: South Burlington, VT Join Date: 08/27/2012 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 83 Rally Car: Cars are lame, I have a motorcycle |
Been trying to think of ways to get to the starting line of the Mt Washington Hillclimb on the cheap(ish). Caging a car seems like a big pain in the ass, so I've been online looking at Sprint car rollers for sale. They're fairly simple, crud even and realtively cheap on the used market. I have an Audi 1.8T power plant and driveline on my radar and even found a bellhousing adaptor to mate a T5 gear box to a VAG product. Obviously, RWD.
The 360 ci engines are good for..300-500 hp running on methanol and the rules I'm reading states that the complete race car with driver, less fuel needs to be 1370#'s. That's really light! If I added a 1.8t that is boosted to 250hp, it could be a very fun hillclimber. The whole thing is crazy, I know but just trying to come up with a solution to my urge to race. Thoughts? |
Paddy1337 Tim Patrick Super Moderator Location: Raleigh, NC Join Date: 01/26/2011 Age: Settling Down Posts: 175 Rally Car: Galant VR-4 |
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danster Haggis Muncher Junior Moderator Location: Haggisland UK Join Date: 01/04/2013 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 409 Rally Car: VWs (for my sins) |
Ain't that the truth. Hmm, I wonder if that line would be enough to get a car through tech / scrutineering..... "Hi Mr Scrutineer, you may not dig this but I'm a biker and live my life without the need for superfluous safety shit, and seeing as caging a car seems like a big pain in the ass I am just going to drive without one mkay". Disappointingly not yet a Jackass |
crankshaft Aaron Gibson Super Moderator Location: South Burlington, VT Join Date: 08/27/2012 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 83 Rally Car: Cars are lame, I have a motorcycle |
Wow, you totally misunderstood what I was saying and you're a dink I guess. |
crankshaft Aaron Gibson Super Moderator Location: South Burlington, VT Join Date: 08/27/2012 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 83 Rally Car: Cars are lame, I have a motorcycle |
Here is a shot of the rear suspension, looks like a 4 link and I think they refer to them as a "live axle"..I think. Simple, adjustable and the AFCO stuff is cheap. Front end.... The latest rage is to make them street legal, which is cool. Possible Rally solo car? If you look closely, you'll see it has a cage smeared all over it hahaha |
crankshaft Aaron Gibson Super Moderator Location: South Burlington, VT Join Date: 08/27/2012 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 83 Rally Car: Cars are lame, I have a motorcycle |
I watched this and it helped me understand what is going on inside these beasts...
Found a trans adapter for a VAG powerplant that would allow me to use a T5 transmission. APR has a "chip" for the stock ECU that will eliminate the immobilizer and need for the cluster. Set of injectors and a K04 turbo and I'm in the 300HP range. Spoke with one of the RA guys yesterday and they thought it would be fine for the hillclimb classes. OR.... I could just write a check for a caged Subaru and blend in. Nah |
danster Haggis Muncher Junior Moderator Location: Haggisland UK Join Date: 01/04/2013 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 409 Rally Car: VWs (for my sins) |
I think I understood fine, it was more my lacklustre attempt to sarcastically diss the rule makers that seems to have been misinterpreted. In the UK imo there have been several recent rule changes to rallying that seem to lack objectivity. EG> Some seats are now no good for rally, yet fine for use in circuit racing and sprints and hillclimbs. Fireproof helmets now needed instead of fire retardant, yet no rule requiring the mandatory removal of plastic dash parts that burn... It all just adds to the overall cost of competing in rally when other similar motorsports disciplines do not need such financial commitment. What's a dink? Disappointingly not yet a Jackass |
crankshaft Aaron Gibson Super Moderator Location: South Burlington, VT Join Date: 08/27/2012 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 83 Rally Car: Cars are lame, I have a motorcycle |
hahaha, foot meet mouth! You Brits always throw me online, which is sad because I do the same thing. I agree 100%, I see it all the time in the construction industry. Codes are a funny thing and interpretation is a problem. Dink- Dual income, no kids.... |
danster Haggis Muncher Junior Moderator Location: Haggisland UK Join Date: 01/04/2013 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 409 Rally Car: VWs (for my sins) |
Ha ha right back, I really need to work on my persona if I come across as dual income no kids!
Now if you'd said drinks income no kids then that would be closer. Back on topic over here in sprinting and hillclimbing there is a class called sports libre where a lot of crazy contraptions compete. Checkout this vid for the "how to beat turbo lag" tip. lol EDIT, better vid Disappointingly not yet a Jackass Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/28/2013 12:51PM by danster. |
john vanlandingham John Vanlandingham Junior Moderator Location: Ford Asylum, Sleezattle, WA Join Date: 12/20/2005 Age: Fossilized Posts: 14,152 Rally Car: Saab 96 V4 |
a knob, an oaf, a git, a chav, a plonker, a yob, a wanker... but it least it ain't a dork. Don't worry, its just the ol' "Two great nations separated by a common language" thing John Vanlandingham Sleezattle, WA, USA Vive le Prole-le-ralliat www.rallyrace.net/jvab CALL +1 206 431-9696 Remember! Pacific Standard Time is 3 hours behind Eastern Standard Time. |
NoCoast Grant Hughes Mega Moderator Location: Whitefish, MT Join Date: 01/11/2006 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 6,818 Rally Car: BMW |
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NoCoast Grant Hughes Mega Moderator Location: Whitefish, MT Join Date: 01/11/2006 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 6,818 Rally Car: BMW |
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There probably isn't enough room to fit a t5 between the engine and the rear center section. The driveline is really short on sprint cars. To address an earlier post: The rear end is a center section (fully locked) with two large axles coming out the side. The large axles (3in) spin through the outboard bearing assembly called a "bird cage".
Sprint cars are super adjustable as far as suspension goes. This also means that they can be adjusted very poorly, very quickly. Car setup would be key on one of these cars. Also, most sprint stuff is super light and easy to mangle/bend. Most guys that race seriously have complete front ends they can swap out in a few minutes if they get tangled in a race, and if there just so happens to be a restart. Sprint cars are awesome, and this could be a lot of fun. There are a few rounds round guys on this forum that can possibly help you with questions. |
NoCoast Grant Hughes Mega Moderator Location: Whitefish, MT Join Date: 01/11/2006 Age: Midlife Crisis Posts: 6,818 Rally Car: BMW |
Here's Todd's onboard from Mt Washington
After lots of hill climbing, the way to drive a sprint car is to charge the straights, try and get through the corner without spinning, then floor it through the straights again. I think a decent hill climb Sprint car around here goes for $15-20k for any I've seen for sale. A BMW Chumpcar can be built for under $10k. It wouldn't be a winning car but you could have fun with it and be able to take it out to track days and races. Build it right and you can do rallies in it also. Caging a car is much easier than a Sprint car that has to have every mount in precisely the right spot if you want the geometry correct. You're picture looks more like what we call Champ class or I call them stupid upright things. Basically a drag race in straights and slowly through corner trying not to loop it. Shit, I just described the same thing twice... Grant Hughes |
crankshaft Aaron Gibson Super Moderator Location: South Burlington, VT Join Date: 08/27/2012 Age: Possibly Wise Posts: 83 Rally Car: Cars are lame, I have a motorcycle |
Thanks for all the responses, much appreciated. I do under stand the limitations and I understand that I'm ramming a round peg in a square hole but I always do things like that hahaha. I found some older dirt track chassis that are longer, like this style....
http://www.babineaumetalworks.com/Projects_2.html The guy is a crazy craftsman, way over the top for me obviuosly. The idea of a tube frame is cool to me, easy to work on and cleaner. Here is some video from Mt Washington of my buddy Paul.... I've driven the Super chicken a few times and I've actually helped him over the years work on it and crew at times. It's actually my footage Anyway, to keep it simpler-ish... Welded diff in stock quattro trans, stock rear diff from an A4 with a shortened driveshaft. A local truck place builds them quick actually. I could buy a caged car today if I wanted to but I think a custom buggy would be more fun. Maybe I'm just an idiot? Here is another tube frame car owned by Gerry Driscoll, a local hillclimber folk hero. As I recall, he held the fastest trap speed at the straight away. He may still have it. |