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johnc

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Posts posted by johnc

  1. Does the rear end actually break loose or does it just feel like its gonna happen?  If its the latter, then you probably don't have an issue and are just not used to a more neutral handling car.  Find a big empty parking lot and map out a 200' diamter skid pad.  Run the car around the skid pad until you find out which end of the car breaks loose first.  Under steady throttle its more likely the front.

  2. 4130 and T45 are medium carbon steel. The only sanctioning body, or any other organization, that requires stress relieving after welding this steel in thicknesses under .125" is NHRA. FIA, SCCA, IMSA, the FAA for experimental aircraft, and more all are fine with properly welded medium carbon steel tubing. None that I know require a cage replacement after 3 years.

  3. Then when a full section with gaps was done and cooled off going back and welding the 3/4" gaps so the weld ended up continuous on each section/area.

     

     

    Oh!  You you welded all the seams with a (essentially) continuous bead.  That's not the normal practice when stich welding a chassis.  Normlayy the gaps are left between the short welds.  I don't know how that would affect your results but it does mean that the entire seam has gone back to the original yield strength of base steel if there was any hardness added via alloying or after the initial rolling.

  4. I don't think a cage work hardens over time, but I could be mistaken. I do know, from the folks at the Lincoln Electric Welding School (took their basic and advanced Motorsports Welding classes back in 2002) that if you use .023 or .025 wire in your MIG welder on tubing with a greater wall thickness then .083 the weld itself will work harden as it cools. I forgot what the exact process is but they said .030 wire up to .118 wall and .035 wire up to .150 wall.

  5. If you are building a track only car, the first to second shift is generally only used when exiting the pits onto the track  - if you're gearing is correct.  There may be one 2nd gear corner on the track but if you've got the car geared correctly and handling well, you shouldn't ever have to use first gear.

  6. It rarely works out that way. I sold my shop back in March and after selling a bunch of stuff I had Datsun parts leftover. Offered them for free, publicly and spent two Saturdays at the storage unit waiting for people to come by and pick up the stuff the desperately wanted. Not one showed up. Wasted my time both days.

     

    I learned my lesson and started contacting people i knew privately. Got rid of a lot of stuff that way.

     

    Also, molds don't store well. They need to be used and kept maintained. They are fully depreciated and are worth nothing on the books. They can make someone thousands of dollars a year (and I've got the sales records for the last five years to prove it) but you have to market and sell like a business. That makes these molds worth something to someone who is serious.

  7. I prefer to do the wrong thing unless you're willing to put your money where your mouth is. I've had three people approach me to buy the molds and all have just vanished after saying ok. A fourth is now checking with my composites guy.

     

    And yes, 8 molds take up a lot of space and cost money to store.

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