aspetuck wrote:So the Lotus 49 was apparently the first Formula 1 car to have the engine bolted directly to the chassis, and the transmission and suspension to the engine. There's a video of Chapman observing them mounting the engine on and I can't figure out how they did it. It looks like these little metal arms bolt on to the back of the chassis. Are these actually engineered into the engine block, or are they also bolted on. If so, how? Could this be done to a regular engine?
designed and cast into the engine heads and block by Cosworth
the H16 BRM in this respect beat it by a few years
the F1 tipo 160 Alfa Romeo similarly (not to be confused with the 159 modded as a test of rear seating concept)
the Mag alloy engine/transmission tunnel formed also the whole structure of the car (4wd flat 12 mid engine rear seat)
(the H16 layout was 4wd adaptable, clutch placement on the gearbox input side caused problems that F1 has now overcome)
the Lancia F1 D50 (front engined) also used its V8 engine structurally
before about 1930 road cars used the engine structurally
torsional stiffness in the front half of the chassis came mostly from lugs/arms cast into the crankcase and bolted to the chassis
eg model T Ford
the rear half of the chassis had little torsional stiffness
in a dual purpose road/track car you might limit yourself to engine types that have little vibration, and plenty of width and depth
ie a V8 with 2 plane crank
you could weld bits on to an existing engine casting
http://www.alfabb.com/bb/forums/alfa-ro ... 160-a.html
http://members.madasafish.com/~d_hodgki ... -e-H16.htm