Well, I have been following your electric car efforts so I'll ride along but there is so much detail that goes into all this. Rather than starting from scratch pick up a used kit car and start fixing the problems with it. Then clean sheet your project. I guarantee it will be faster and cheaper .. Till you're in it you don't know what the true class limitations are and what is most important in that form of racing.greenpower dude reloaded wrote:too be honest, it is a rediculous project to contemplate, especially considering my current back up BUT! that's what really fires me up. It's a means of forcing me to learn. I mean where's the fun in a kit car? Haha.
By your reckoning. I should run away, and you are probably right but it's the fact it's such a big project is the reason i'm doing it. I've FINALLY managed to get them to agree to send over the draft regs which i shld get later this week.
It is supposed to be a realatively open class, but it doesn't bother me if im not fastest out of the box. I'm almost certain i can construct a lightweight highly aerodynamic chassis and i have a fair bit of background motor knowledge...
So who's with me?
the fsae cars are a blast to drive and build. They are pretty hard to beat on an autox course too. On a big track they start to show there weakness they are really on built for lower speeds and quick acceleration. They do have electric FSAE cars as well now and hybrids. maybe look more at a formula 1000 car.greenpower dude reloaded wrote:Thanks for the support guys, I know this is turning in to a bit of a meandering thread already but you'll get through to me eventually.
I don't know much about formula SAE but I was looking at a car today, and although I should have asked the team I was a bit a busy. What can people tell me about the performance of that sort of thing.
I get the impression they are a bit more autotesty but maybe with the amount of SAE people on this forum we could get a nice starting point. Maybe a longer wheelbase but similar layout otherwise?
RE: Locost/Haynes roadster. I really considered it but it's all a bit too westfield iRacer for me and that's not what i'm aiming for.
Lucky you.Jersey Tom wrote:Yep. You're gonna have to find some sort of vehicle that's at least ballpark similar. Otherwise.. even with say Avon, on a 13" wheel, they have 33 bias constructions / sizes and 22 radial constructions / sizes, and 17 tread compounds. Not all those are combinations of each other.. but the point being there's a lot of options!
Not to mention other size wheels.. or other manufacturers (Dunlop, Goodyear, Hoosier, whoever).
Gotta have some sort of starting point.. best really would be to ask some tire manufacturers what they'd recommend as a starting point given the basic vehicle load and power output.
From there you could easily do an all-day test on constructions and compounds to find what's gonna work best. It gets expensive really quickly.