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build diary << | show individual entries | >>November 14, 2005: Any other news? Well, my house is better insulated now although the Seven has seen no action. I'll have to sketch up my ideas for the front pushrod suspension soon and show them off, although I do want to figure out what the front and rear geometries are doing and if I should tweak them. That involves some quality time with my tape measure and I just haven't been all that motivated recently. It's really tempting to just stick some stiff springs and bigger swaybars on there to stop the bloody thing from moving around on the suspension too much. This won't improve the street ride much, which is ironic given my "coming soon!" muffler that should make the car much nicer to drive without a helmet. I'm also reworking the website a bit to make it work better. Regular visitors should appreciate the updates and hopefully there will be lots of new visitors due to the book. A new URL - http://www.cheapsportscar.net - and a new server will be coming soon. Don't worry, the existing address will keep working. Any feature requests? Let me know via the guestbook or email! You won't be able to download the entire site but I can add things like RSS easily enough. I have a couple of features that I think will be pretty cool. True to the spirit of things, I'm building the code from scratch for this.
I've been thinking more and more about what to do with respect to the suspension. I was recently provided with a set of measurements for the Miata suspension, front and rear. Should I just stick them on? I can't, the nose isn't wide enough. I will probably model them in a 3D program and see if I can get the same behaviour though. Rumour has it the roll center is extremely well controlled. I'm also going to model my current suspensions and see what the camber curves look like and if it does have a good ride height for roll center control. A call from the owner of the GRM Locost indicates that he is (probably) running on the front bumpstops. Combined with the lower CG thanks to the lower ride height, this might explain why his car seems to roll so much less. And sometimes I just wonder if I'm being too much of a perfectionist (whiner?) and I should just stick some stiffer springs and sway bars on the car and drive it. It's quite possible that all I really, really need is a good alignment done on a rack instead of at home. I was thinking more about the handling of the car today while driving in to work in a Miata. I realised that while I'm giving the impression that it's a real handful to drive, it's actually very friendly. There aren't many cars that I'll purposely pitch into a big slide, certainly not with the sort of cornering speed and traction generated by the Seven. I want the car to be world-class and corner as fast as it possibly can. It should be superlative, not just impressive.
My new muffler arrived today. It's monstrous. 6" in diameter and 27" long. It's a big change from the 3.5" resonator I have now. I suspect it will muffle the Seven almost completely. That's not such a bad thing, it's a vocal little beast and while I'll probably miss the flames and racket, this will let me hit full throttle without wincing. The resonator didn't really work well for actual muffling. I'll get used to this new monster eventually. Hopefully. Maybe I'll have to exchange it for a 4 x 22" one or something. While reading various Carroll Smith books and Miata technical manuals (how sad is that?) I realised that I have a potential area of improvement. My shocks came with little hard bumpstops. Nothing fancy, just something to take the worst shock out of a bottoming. The original Miata came with a similar setup with a little more attention paid to the shape. In 1999, Mazda introduced a much softer bumpstop that looks remarkably like the ones described by Smith. They're made of urethane and according to Mazda, "Because urethane has damping force, the bump stopper reduces the skipping sensation experienced during strong laternal gravitational force on rough road surfaces and improves cornering". Hmm, I expect the engineer that wrote that was Japanese. But I have a set here off a Miata and I'll give them a try. Bill Ritzel, a Miata enthusiast, sent me some pictures of a clever plug wire cover he made. I think that will be a nice addition to the Seven and keep the wires from scuffing on the hood. Watch this space!
I took some measurements of the suspension pickups today. I just have to measure the front uprights and I'll be able to model the suspension and see how well it's working. I could do this with the existing Excel sheet from the US Locost group but I'd rather design my own little suspension analysis program. Hey, I'm in this to learn. Skip Cannon is a Miata-owning friend of mine who's caught the Seven bug after driving a Caterham SV at the Aspen track day a few weeks back. He wants to run a Miata motor in it though. He's not a web junkie like me but he does have a bit of a site up on the project.
It's time to set some goals for the Seven, though. Let's see, I'll get the suspension modelled by the end of the year and decide what path to take there. I'll also have the hood finished along with a new exhaust. There, a target! I'm not working at the feverish pace I was when I was coming to the finish of the initial build, am I?
entry 1081
The exhaust system is not going to be finished before the end of the year. I haven't sent the huge muffler back to Summit Racing yet and I have only about 12 days before I leave for the holidays. I will attempt to finish the hood though. I'm also learning SolidWorks (an extremely cool 3D prototyping program) to play with suspension bits. Also on the suspension - this photo was referenced on the LocostUSA builder's forum. Those rockers are apparently stock motorcycle parts. I hadn't considered that approach - motorcycles tend to show up in junkyards with regularity so if I can identify a good part, I should be able to buy it fairly cheap. The design of the rocker is the difficult part of the inboard suspension, I'll let the highly-paid motorcycle engineers sort that out for me!
I've written to the Fraser car company in NZ about that nice rocker they use. Hopefully they'll share the information. Their cars have some nice touches. Here's a shot of their front suspension. Nice clean design. The lower front control arm looks like the one I'd like to build. The headlights can be removed by loosening a couple of bolts, great for track days. And check out that brake rotor!
With regards to suspension, John Grimberg contacted me and is willing to help out with machining a custom rocker. Time to fire up the computer and figure out what that rocker should look like then!
I'm heading back to Canada for a couple of weeks. Not much will happen on the Seven during that time obviously. Hopefully I'll come back all full of plans and motivated to at least get the hood, exhaust and fender repair done. A shot of the hood fitment. Mark Rivera has offered to cut the hood, punch louvres and bend the two lips for me. It would have to be shipped to me but it's a tempting offer. Mark's building a car of his own. I've also been considering moving to the 0.040" aluminum instead of the 0.050" I used last time. It saves a bit of weight and the louvres will stiffen things up. I'm not sure about that but it will make the bending easier. Time to play with the existing hood and see. I started trying to model the front suspension in SolidWorks last night, only to discover I have a lot of learning to do with the program. I'm still not sure if I should write my own analysis program (I like building things), use an existing Excel spreadsheet, write my own spreadsheet or use SolidWorks. The latter is tempting because it's such a cool program. Time to do something, though. I want to have the car up and running again by spring. I guess that means it's time to fix the rear fender that was ripped off too. So many plans! |