Allt Nytt | Kalender | Racerbanor | Arrangörer | Forum | Varvtider/Loggar |
Våra race- och banåkarbilar Alfa Romeo GTS2000 -75, Såld... | << 1, 2, 3 ... , 38, 39, 40 >> 15 besök idag (293527 totalt) |
Blir ingen byggtråd tyvärr, ska köpa färdig racebil den här gången... _________________ Björn Axelsson Ginetta G50, #30 SPVM Modsport 2, Axe Motorsport BMW E30 t6, #30 MSLS långlopp, NG-Racing |
||||
_________________ Crister Borg Alfa Romeo 155 TS -95, https://rejsa.nu/forum/viewtopic.php?t=119773 SAAB 96 Ninja, https://rejsa.nu/forum/viewtopic.php?p=1744165#1744165 |
||||
_________________ // Mats Karlsson http://www.matsgarage.com Biltråd 1: https://rejsa.nu/forum/viewtopic.php?t=85101 Biltråd 2: https://rejsa.nu/forum/viewtopic.php?t=115095 |
||||
Apologies in advance guys my Swedish is limited to Surströmming and Ikea I just thought I'd let you know the car is safe and well. Bjorn did an amazing job in creating this car. Over the last year I have been extensively converting the car so it is considerably different now (Suspension, engine, ECU, bodywork, interior...) I hope you don't mind the changes.
_________________ Richard Beaumont |
||||
With that first picture you are entirely forgiven for anything done or to be done to it.
_________________ // Mats Karlsson http://www.matsgarage.com Biltråd 1: https://rejsa.nu/forum/viewtopic.php?t=85101 Biltråd 2: https://rejsa.nu/forum/viewtopic.php?t=115095 |
||||
Glad you found the way back to this board i think there are several people in here who will appreciate that it found a nice home and is continuously modifyed and driven. Will be fun to follow the adventures in the PH thread!
_________________ Cédric Nyberg Porsche 924 Turbo Toyota GT86 Formel Vee Veemax MKIVB 1970 www.instagram.com/garagecedric/ |
||||
_________________ Stefan Atterhall Alfa Romeo Alfasud TI 1,7 8V -78, #16 CAR Challenge (klass II) www.carchallenge.se |
||||
Thanks for the warm welcome guys
The engine is still the same F20C but I have modified various aspects such as the fuel system (Fuel rail, injectors, adaptors...), throttle assembly, stripped and rebuilt the head, cooling and airflow and various other bits and pieces. A brief summary of the engine work below: New panels for front end/engine cooling Due to the F1 injector set-up not really being a solution for a road car (Difficult to start or idle when fuel is being squirted onto the face of a butterfly 20cm from the combustion chamber), I changed the injection and throttle system also the car was mapped for E85 fuel so the injectors also need to be changed for normal fuel. Following the carbon airbox removal a few measurements made Found some lovely short 440cc injectors only 38mm o-ring to o-ring. Due to all the redesign issues clearance was the biggest headache. I'm literally talking only 1mm or less is some instances between fuel rail and throttle linkages etc. As the injectors didn't fit I modified them on the lathe Next up I needed to fabricate some parts to relocate the throttle assembly so an inch thick slab of aircraft aluminium was put to good use A few of the newly fabricated parts Throttle assembly parts now made Then a bit of weight reduction Throttle assembled Other new parts modified/fabricated Made a loom mounting bracket out of titanium Almost finished with the engine Latest is the fuel system is complete. Made another little titanium mounting bracket for the rigid section of the fuel return pipe: Which fits here: Engine bay fuel lines new layout: This picture gives a close up high-lighting the tight tolerance clearance issues referred to earlier: Final assembly: Fitted a MAP sensor system, as mapping will be a whole lot simpler and smoother going forward. Trouble is there is literally no space as the underside of the inlet manifold has water pipes/looms/alternator. and the upper side has the fuel rail and throttle linkage. So here goes, first off remove carbon airbox and remove complete intake system Here is the removed manifold. I worked out there would be around 1mm clearance if I tap into the intake runners below the fuel rail but only if I run the 1/8NPT tap fully down to seat the connectors as low as possible Pretty much this part sorted Not everything went smoothly. No compression on No.3 cylinder. Stripped the inlet manifold off and you can see here an M5 bolt stuck between head and valve: M5 bolt came from here from the carbon airbox: Engine strip required to check for further damage: The result is basically I have to replace a bent valve and associated components and I've now sent the head away to re-machine the valve seat. The piston has also been impacted but luckily no bore damage so I have simply die ground the piston for valve clearance in situ: Head repaired then rebuilt: _________________ Richard Beaumont |
||||
Really cool update!
Just out of curiosity: after having read a few of your threads on PH, you seem to like weight reduction (as we all do), how's your thought process when you drill out a component like one of those above? What's your tactic for spacing out the holes and deciding on what drill to use? It would be interesting to hear your reasoning, since the only time I've tried it I just went haywire with a drill and (surprise ...) destroyed the part. _________________ MVH/ Fredrik Henriksson "But this car is full of my two least favorite things: rust and electrical issues." / _\_(ツ)_/_ Dork @ GRM Forum |
||||
The main consideration is the loading and forces that the component will be subjected to and whether for instance it is primary or secondary structure. In the case of the throttle, the thick aluminium spec was massive overkill. The forces acting upon it are minimal (just a throttle cable creating radial movement. The support structure is also not subjected to much force, but basically I didn't make any stress/strain calculations, I just used a bit of common sense. As an engineer you have a natural understanding of material and can make a fairly accurate guesstimate based on experience. For more critical areas, obviously more care needs to be taken before you go crazy _________________ Richard Beaumont |
||||
What an introduction! Very cool update! Welcome.
Seems like the car ended up in the perfect loving home, getting a lot of attention and mods.
Don't forget engine vibrations. It can get ugly quite fast, especially if you by coincident get eigenmodes/harmonics in the range of the engine vibrations. But then again, it will probably be fine. _________________ /Mats Strandberg onemanracing.com BMW 330i -05 |
||||
I'm still working on the car most days and as an example, since the Nurburgring session last week, I decided to give the front axle a good DVI as numerous components had been tested for the first time. Lucky I did really as although all the new parts I made were fine, I found out there had been light contact between the upper control arm/wishbone and the shock mount. The picture below refers. This was basically caused by a recent geo that had been carried by a local garage (a minor oversight as it was quite complicated and took 2 days): I also noted during the previous geo set-up that I needed to address the steering system: there was only around 10mm of thread attaching the tie rods. So by welding on these nuts, an extra 11.7mm safety margin created: Following this little lot I tried out a bit of 'string theory' for the first time (not tested the car yet as only finished 1 hour ago): Then something I've been planning to try out for a while now, ditching the front ARB. The main reason was for wheel clearance at full lock but as the chassis is very stiff and the suspension setup very track focused, so I feel I may get away with this (I've done the same with the 996). Also 4.45kg saved so now down to 874kg _________________ Richard Beaumont |
||||
Våra race- och banåkarbilar Alfa Romeo GTS2000 -75, Såld... | << 1, 2, 3 ... , 38, 39, 40 >> 15 besök idag (293527 totalt) |