Drifting The art of going sideways

drrifttting rollcage?

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Old Oct 24, 2004 | 08:03 PM
  #31 (permalink)  
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I am going PVC all the way.....just for the looks
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Old Oct 24, 2004 | 08:05 PM
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REAL TIME ACURA ... NOT an auto power cage...
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Old Oct 24, 2004 | 11:48 PM
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but those cages are not feasable for street usage
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Old Oct 25, 2004 | 03:58 AM
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You have to remember though, A bunch of ITS cars and street stock and showoroom stock cars all runthe auto power cages, and they go at speeds two to three times as fast as the speeds we encounter when drifting.
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Old Oct 25, 2004 | 05:48 AM
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Originally posted by funk
but those cages are not feasable for street usage
If there good enough for the track why not the street ? thats my thought.
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Old Oct 25, 2004 | 01:34 PM
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You'd probably get pretty tired of having to Dukes of Hazzard it into your car all the time.
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Old Oct 25, 2004 | 11:00 PM
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all that work and they didnt put in gussets
There's actually only a few places in a roll cage that require gusseting. It's on the parts that are going to see torsion movement between the adjacent tubes. Most of the tubes in a roll cage actually are stressed in compression or tension as the car attempts to flex. And those cages are fully structural, not just safety. I think we are mostly concerned with a safety cage hre although I plan to incorporate a fully integrated structural cage into my coupe.

That blue car is a real piece of work. Originally built by BMW motorsport in Germany, it was run by Dieter Quester in the European GT series and I believe won the 24hrs Nurburging once plus the Spa Francorchamps endurance race before being sent to america. It eventually was bought by a team I used to work for in Jupiter and I'ver personally been through that car inside and out. The length to which BMW went in that cage construction is admirable.

We copied that cage design into another M3 we had and that car ended up being rolled on 2 seperate occasions. The car was still straight as an arrow on the frame jig!!! The first time it went over 2-1/2 times, the second time (first event after fixing the body damage and suspension) the customer/driver rolled it a good 4 rotations at Moroso. Needed a new roof but chassis was still intact. I was amazed.

Anyway, anyone interested in a serious cage for a great price should get in touch with www.Ter-tech.com in Palm Beach. They recently started working with Chassis Engineering in Riviera Beach to sell and install their weld-in cage kits and can do anything you could desire, from a 6-pt to a full integrated cage tied to the strut towers and rear subframe pickups.

Installed prices start at $700 including the cost of the tubes. Call them to set up a time and get a quote on the turn-around time.

-Sean
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Old Oct 26, 2004 | 08:10 AM
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Cool Sean,

The blue car is State side, and was done in NC if IM not mistaken.
But I know the Euro one your speaking of. But yes THOSE ARE fully funtional cages. I honestly would want one in my ride and will have one in the new whip.


Mike
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