Wow...this isn't safe at all. If it's a show car cool, if you're really going to drive this often. May god help you.
you have destroyed the structural integrity of that car. Cars are designed the way they are designed for a reason. Those random holes and things on the car are all there for a reason. Beneath that floor pan that you cut in half used to be the backbone of that car, now it is the backbone of two different cars cut in half and it looks like a death trap to me.
It is safe enough to be taken to a show on a trailer but thats about it...
oh and LOL @ the people that voted yes...
its one of those. "hell it works" type.
lol
but um keep up the good work.
ATL DAsquad Member #9
I think RHD conversions are retarded but at least you did a good job with it. Gotta have balls to chop a car in half and weld it back together, I'll give you the props on that.
looks damn good
Lsu tigers going # 1 again
Natural selection at its finest
Good thing is with any accident it will be off the road.. the cutting of the unibody alone "totaled" this car.
props to you! great job!!
ive been around a few rhd conversions, i didnt read everyones post so someone might have already told you. you need to do it by cutting the firewall out and replacing it with the rhd firewall. im pretty sure this car is going to be a rattle trap and i would hate to get t-boned while driving it. if it not going to be a daily than thats ok i guess the welds look good but personally i would not drive it. just my![]()
Previous posters have taken the words right out of my mouth... You'd have to have some balls to drive that on the highway... or anywhere aside from your driveway... please notify us all of when/where you are planning on driving it so that we can steer clear. You have completely compromised the structural integrity of that car, If it is going to be a show car that you drive on and off a trailer then props to you for putting way too much effort in to something that was completely unnecessary... you could have imported a safe RHD car for probably less than you have put in to this death trap. There are ways that you could have done this that would have been remotely safe, but you chose to go a route that could cost you your life should you or someone else make one wrong turn. I also hope for handling sake that you did measure everything 100% accurately otherwise the car is totally worthless.
I don't see a problem with this at all, as long as you had proper welds i don't see why it would fall apart. Did you guys know that the actual weld is stronger than the metal that was welded. If the welds were done properly, then you have nothing to worry about.
its like saying those guys who build the locosts shouldn't race those cars because they welded their own frame, that's ridiculous.
if you feel you did a proper job welding it, then you have nothing to worry about, and i see that you did this method because the car looks to have been wrecked in the front, i think you did a good job.
Lol I don't even care about if he got in accident or blah blah blah. I'm just LMFAO imagining this thing going down the road and breaking in half in the middle of the road. This definately gives a new meaning to "RICE" in my book.
VTECH ... Making phones since 1994.
Looking for Integra Sedan (DB7/8) parts <--clickable
Q:Nitrous on stock LS high mileage. Too risky?
A:IMO nos is like steroids and giving steroids to a grandma doesnt sound all that good to me!
isnt everyone working for the DOT all of a sudden in 2010, lol
Hybridaccord
PS3 online screen name: Eiswritsat
You must be a COMPLETE idiot.
So you think that cutting a solid piece in half, then re-welding it is safe? I guess cutting wires in half then re-connecting them is fine too, and cutting a roll bar in half and re-welding, etc.
When you split a continuous piece of anything in half and re-connect it it creates a weak point, in this case, THE HALF OF THE CAR, a VERY weak point. Have you ever made ANYTHING?
Locost cars are NOT welded halfway through the chassis, they're also tube framed cars. Have you built one? Ever built a roll cage? Ever even read a FIA or SCCA rulebook?
I can't believe you just posted such a stupid comment. The welds are stronger then the metal, WHO CARES HOW STRONG THE WELDS ARE, when you get the force from a 10mph fender bender hitting them lets see what split metal does.![]()
The welds are stronger than the metal, and yes if you cut a roll bar and reweld it properly, it will be fine.
I have not read an FIA or SCCA rule book, but who need that in order to see what is safe or not.
This here is a mater of material science and structural engineering, not FIA or SCCA rule book. If you've taken a course in either subject, you would know that if the welds were properly made, then there is no problem here.
Before you start calling people idiots, get your facts straight.
You are kidding right? You truly believe cutting something in half and rewelding it is stronger then if it were one continuous piece? What classes did you take? I've taken numerous engineering classes and have definitely been around stuff like this for a LONG time, I can assure you it's VERY unsafe.
FIA and SCCA make rules per safety, FIA makes rules for basically the automotive WORLD not just racing. I was just asking because you mentioned people racing a Locost and thinking they weld in the middle of the chassis.
Note to self: Never let this Gayiata owner work on anything I see.
Hard enough? Try 10mph lol.
No, I'm not an e-thug, if I was an e-thug I'd be harassing you and saying stupid threats.
I do know a lot about cars, I've been racing since I was five in karts and since then that has forced me to do a lot of welding, cage making, etc. I've worked for two race shops and have I'd say pretty good knowledge about this type of engineering, I also am majoring in mechanical engineering. I don't even know what Wyotech is.
You're the one sitting here saying weld is stronger then metal and that this is perfectly safe. You haven't truly explained why it's safe, or why no car companies do this, you say it's to save cost...really?So no, I'm not a moron.
i agree with you completly you can not cut something in half and weld it back together and structly be just as strong you have made weak point cause if anything is gonna give in that piece of metal it will be at the point of thhe weld every time and if he went to wyotech for body work he would have been taught this cause i was taught that at UTI but you just cant tell some people things
ehhh its like trying to teach a fish to walk.
you're so hard headed and think you're soo smart.
welds are stronger than the metal itself, its gonna take just as much force as before to break this car in half, again if the welds are done properly. if you have welded before like this and what you made failed, its because you didn't do a good job welding it.
and just so you know i'm majoring in mechanical engineering as well.
You sure do talk a lot of crap to someone you don't know, I've stated engineering facts, if you're majoring in mechanical engineering I feel horrible for whatever school you go to and I am horrified of what job you may have when you graduate.
Tell my how the weld is stronger then the metal. I've never done this before and have never had a weld fail, I've never done this because it's common sense you just DON'T do it. No shop would even consider doing this.
Think of it this way, I break a plate in half, I glue it together down the middle, is the plate still strong? No.
I know I don't know everything about cars, but I do know a lot about chassis setup which in return means welding and structures. I know NOBODY in there right mind would cut a roll bar in half and weld it back like you mentioned, I also know nobody with real engineering knowledge actually just common sense would think this setup is safe.
You're the only one being an e-thug here.