Tools and tubes
Found out that the engine would hit the chassis if I put the diff where I intended to. A***. This meant some hunting through the spares pile and a bit of Googling - turns out Mazda use the same CV joints and spline pattern on the 1.6 and 1.8 Mk1 cars, but the 1.8s have 20mm shorter half shafts... This meant I could swap the NS drive shaft to a 1.8 model, shift the diff over 10mm, and it now clears, happy days!
Knocked up a build table - a big sheet of MDF, some old beams from some pallet racking and a bit of chipboard underneath to brace it all. Solid, flat and weighs 110kg!
Had a weekend away at the Race of Remembrance - an amazing event and won Class C, bonus!
Ordered MSA compliant roll hoop and other bits of CDS tubing for the braces and harness bar - great service from Tom at tube-bender.co.uk.
Diff came back from converting by Douglas at Westgarage Engineering. I spent a few hours pondering how to do it and it's not as simple as it first seems, so sent it to him... Cracking job, not cheap cheap but good value I'd say, given my lathe wouldn't be man enough for the task and there's a lot of work in it. 16T front and 54T sprockets, for 530 chain (big beefy b*******, sprockets are a touch under 9mm thick!). Total weight 12kg, so a good chunk saved there over having a full casing and crownwheel/pinion.
Chassis arrived today. Well, I say chassis... Decided to go balls out and go for round tubing. Much harder to work with but should end up lighter and stiffer than box.
So decided I needed a bit of help to get all the joins nice and tight...
First tester - done a few of these now to do some practice welding tonight. Find doing round tubes quite tricky at the moment, so plenty of test runs needed - have found a few tips online so going to give them a go.
Also updated the chassis design a touch, worked out how to mount the diff, ordered a chain, and spoke to a local fabricator about extending my headers... At the moment it fouls the billet sump, but chopping and adding 20-25mm into them should do it. What's making it tricky is that the tubing is titanium, but it can be sorted. The other option is a dry sump - but then you need remote electric water pump and controller, and all the other plumbing / tanks - suddenly adds a fair bit of cost and complexity, so not keen to go down that route really.
Will update again in a few weeks, hoping to get cracking properly now, should have some bits of chassis tacked up for next time
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