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#1
hole punch speedholes for lightweight
D
Posted on: 2012/11/21 12:15
anyone use one of these before?
Im thinking of buying one to lighten my porky 1000 :) http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/10-TON-HYD ... in_15&hash=item51a1f9c0f0
#2
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
Posted on: 2012/11/21 12:58
I'm just letting rust do it for me. Why D? Why mess with structural integrity for a road car?
I understand for fuel efficiency but in a Datsun I don't see any benefit personally. They need all the metal they can get. Just get the thing running and then see.
#3
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
D
Posted on: 2012/11/21 22:36
Shes running but Speedholes add strength when done properly with proper tapering.
#4
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
ddgonzal
Posted on: 2012/11/21 22:39
Add strength?
When properly done, lightening holes do not weaken the structure. They add lightness, which is equivalent to free horsepower.
#5
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
dattoboy_nz
Posted on: 2012/11/21 22:54
My dads friend reshelled a nissan works cherry coupe and added the "original" speed holes to the shell and body again. It took him 2 weekends and he had a icecream container full of scrap at the end which weighed about 3kg. A lot of work for little gain. I would be concerned about adding speed holes to a car that didnt already have a cage and be seam welded.
Much easier for the driver to the gym haha.
#6
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
D
Posted on: 2012/11/21 23:53
Well that particular datsun already had its cherry busted :)
I agree its alot of work but it does add strength if done properly to some areas that are flat flimsy steel. eg. you can have a strip of 1.6mm thick flat stee then add some speedholes (tapered ones like on truck cabin steps or suregrip alloy plate) and its much harder to bend. On further inspection the linked product has no tapered dies? this is the stronger result of tapered or flared holes http://espimages.biz/2386/I/525/2/images_k%20851.jpg here is the hole punch and flare tool http://www.motorsport-tools.com/hole- ... wage-tool-1-p-268069.html
#7
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
ddgonzal
Posted on: 2012/11/22 0:49
only 3kg? Yet that's how the top racing teams win consistently.
For a street car that is not competing it is less important or let's say non-important.
#8
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
Rallytwit
Posted on: 2012/11/22 4:44
My D-Sports Racer was a tube frame car but it used sheet metal between the chassis tubes in key areas, the sheeted in area had said flared holes and the car was very stiff. The car was was also about 60 lbs overweight for the class at 960 lbs yet I set the class record with it due to it being a stable platform versus flexi flier. A more glaring example is a story I've never forgotten; SCCA GT-3 tube frame cars, one was run for a driver comepteing in national races and was right on the minimum weight, the other car ran for an actress (Marsha Mason I think) and her car was built with extra protection. Well the lightweight car broke so said actress offered up her car for the other driver...........the heavier car was faster due to extra stiffness.
The reality of our cars is that 100 lb reduction equals about 4 horsepower.............you need several hundred holes to get that. A 1200 hood weighs around 30lbs or so most of which is the skin (the underbracing is pretty light)................think of the square footage of a hood and the amount of effort involved making that many holes. You'd be better served to make carbon fiber doors. Now if you are looking to stiffen the chassis then some strategic flared holes would do that nicely. Tom
#9
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
1200rallycar
Posted on: 2012/11/23 10:19
i'm trying to think where on a datsun you would even put these holes?
most sheet metal in a datto is not load bearing... but it keeps the wind/weather out
#10
Re: hole punch speedholes for lightweight
Wombat_racing
Posted on: 2012/11/24 5:31
David Browns ex Reg Cook car in New Zealand had a few holes in ot to help with weight.
http://www.ozdat.com/ozdatonline/featurecars/Cherry/cherry.html#1 Have a look at the engine bay pics and the interior pic. You can view topic.
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