

Whilst pulling bits out of the shed I place some bits together and checked the viability of the wheel base with a straight six engine. As the engine will be a bit more forward than a Jeep one it should be okay. With a wide track and short wheelbase it is going to look a bit like a land crab. Think Austin Kimberley with east-west 6 cylinder.

I need this part from the Falcon front end to get some measurements from so the spot welds were drilled out and the part was removed. and the chassis rail was measured 103mm x 56mm. That is pretty darn close to 100 x 50.



I carefully measured the original rail and transferred it to a piece I had laying around and bolted it in with some threaded rod and as much of the original mounts as possible. It looks good and the holes for the top arms are in the right spot so suspension geometry will be retained. It was at about this point I started to think about how I was going to pick these points up. I thought maybe some angle iron uprights, box section like the pick up place do, even made some enquiries regarding the cost of there kits and fitment to my project. Couldn't decide so I got some lengths of 100 x 50 x 3 and started on the front rails as these will not changed.


8 crush tubes later and I had some rails.

At about this point a mate come around to get some turning done and while I was doing that he was checking out my new project and just started asking question and throwing in his 2 cents worth and some of it was good.

I took some measurements and took a template to my local plasma cutter and got 4 of these made and welded them in place.

Then started plating the outside in 3mm. The idea is to do this back and front of the coil over mount then drill the front plate through the holes on the Ford pressing. Once this is done I will drop past the engineer I used for the roadster to see what he thinks. I can't afford design work from him.
Parts bought
Chassis rail steel $105
Plasma cut plates $40
Nuts and bolts $20
3mm sheet offcut $50
Cost $1485
Brock