Dubstep Shep
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Though most of what I'll be doing will probably be open track days.
Though most of what I'll be doing will probably be open track days.
Regardless, you don't "piece together a custom roll bar." This isn't a turbo kit; you can't buy some used parts here and there and just throw them all together.
You either buy a roll bar/cage you bolt/weld in (like the Maximum Motorsports one), or you take your car to a qualified shop and have them build one into your car, to your specifications.
What, exactly, is wrong with the Maximum Motorsports unit, anyway, especially since most of what you'll be doing is open track days?
From what I understand, CM is more rigid than DOM, just like you said, to achieve a similar level of rigidity, you need less material.
However, DOM will bend when pushed past that limit, and CM will just fracture.
Maybe I'm mistaken. But I believe any flaws in a DOM cage will be less catastrophic than a CM cage because of the ways in which both fail in extreme conditions.
Just keep an eye on your load-paths! If you're going to try to land the back-stays on the rear shock mounts (good but not essential), you'll need to build up a plinth box around the mounts, then weld your back-stay to that, along with any lateral bracing you may want. If you're starting from scratch, the MM bar would make a pretty good "donor base" to begin with, and if you have the fab skills to do plinth boxes, grinding off the backstay stubs from the MM bar and relocating them would be a piece of cake...
So, you say you want the roll bar to tie into the rear shock mounts because you are going to a coilover suspension in the rear. That's a good idea. But you didn't say why you are going to a coilover. In my experience there are very few benefits and lots of drawbacks. And once you get away from using a coilover, the Maximum rollbar becomes a good off-the-shelf unit. Add a couple extra bars if you want (we sometimes do) and you have the rollbar that will work well.
Simply put because it's a better system than a shock and spring for road racing.
The why is a little more complex than that, and there are plenty of people that are more knowledgeable than me on the subject, but results speak for themselves. I'm running Griggs racing suspension for a reason, and that reason is it gets results.
Aw come on...humor us with some tech
Just throwing this out there...there's a pretty successful Mustang shop about 2.5 hours south of you...
In Dallas? What's their name?
Oh snap. Didn't know they were that close.
I'm going to try and find something a little closer before I go that far, but if not I'll hit them up.
You won't find anything. Be careful though...Vorshlag can be bad for your bank account.