Any problems with "swiss cheese" frame?
#1
Any problems with "swiss cheese" frame?
Any of you hardcore dragracers out there know of the 63 pontiac catalina and the swiss cheese frame, where they took a holesaw and cut 3" holes cut every half inch down the length of the frame. Does anyone know if that would cause a problem in chassis flex? The circle distributes itsload evenly, so I dont see how it would increase flex or warp or anything of the sort. Just throwing the idea out there.
#2
RE: Any problems with "swiss cheese" frame?
last year one of the fastest fwd grand prix's (right around 9 sec. flat 1/4)did just that to the subframe/bumpers/etc on his car. well to make a long story short, the subframe snapped like a twig under the 8-900hp loadwith all the holes. on a full frame vehicle though, not sure how well that will work.
#5
#7
RE: Any problems with "swiss cheese" frame?
Sounds like a bad idea to me. Most racers try to strengthen their frames and loose other stuff. The swiss cheese cars were not for daily driving and if they broke, GM would give them another. As Hank said, there is a lot of metal, bumpstops, and other items that can be deleted. Smaller tank. ABS or fiberglass rear roll pan. I would try loosing the weight in the front before the rear though. Need the rear to stay planted.
Trending Topics
#8
RE: Any problems with "swiss cheese" frame?
ORIGINAL: Chopper1
Sounds like a bad idea to me. Most racers try to strengthen their frames and loose other stuff. The swiss cheese cars were not for daily driving and if they broke, GM would give them another. As Hank said, there is a lot of metal, bumpstops, and other items that can be deleted. Smaller tank. ABS or fiberglass rear roll pan. I would try loosing the weight in the front before the rear though. Need the rear to stay planted.
Sounds like a bad idea to me. Most racers try to strengthen their frames and loose other stuff. The swiss cheese cars were not for daily driving and if they broke, GM would give them another. As Hank said, there is a lot of metal, bumpstops, and other items that can be deleted. Smaller tank. ABS or fiberglass rear roll pan. I would try loosing the weight in the front before the rear though. Need the rear to stay planted.