

Well, the Miata reinforcement is beautiful but that webbed design is way beyond my capabilities.onlytrueromeo wrote:Carbon steel will rush pretty quickly being exposed to all the elements unless you paint it very well. There will be no movement so you should not have to worry about anything wearing. You will also not want something brittle+hard as we would want more of an elastic deformation to occur rather than plastic so that we would not see stress cracks.
http://www.flyinmiata.com/index.php?dep ... %201990-97" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Trust the experts! Stainless steel would be the best because of the non-corrosive nature of it, but regular A36 carbon steel would probably work too, assuming you will be priming+painting everything afterwards and maybe even adding a rubber coating to it. If you weld everything, you will have a hard time removing the exhaust in the future, but it will make construction alot cheaper! Do not use round beams as in rebar because they are only good in tension applications and concrete reinforcement. Get something w/ an I shape or flat or HHS would be nice if they make them small - I've only dealt with stuff for designing buildings/bridges in class. You want it to be able to handle tension/compression and bending applied to the center of it. (transverse loads). This is why a "webbed" design like the miata one is nice! Not that you'd be jacking the car from the center of the brace, but it is good to know which way and how beams will deflect. A round beam will deflect any which way, but a differently shaped beam should only deflect along its weak axis.
I was planning to bolt the X beams in the middle, and possibly to another reinforcement welded/bolted to the center of the car if I can find a beam there. Could weld the X beams, but it wouldn't be as strong as a bolt since I'd have to edge or butt weld it over a short length.onlytrueromeo wrote:Ya, I wouldn't think stainless would be an option for most of us!
Good good on bolting to the frame. Make sure all your cross supports are welded to each other (like in the frame example if you have an X, weld at the crossing of the two) This will make the effective length of each member shorter and provide a stronger brace rather than if you just overlapped the two. You can also cut + weld them so you only have 1 layer of metal. I'm probably not explaining this very well![]()
Good luck! Definitely Take pictures!
MrMazda92 wrote:I find Honduh forums more helpful, typically more pleasant too.