This channel is far and away my favorite automotive channel. Every video is extremely high quality without feeling corporate and soulless, which in the automotive sector is surprisingly hard to come by. Usually it’s either huge budget channels that feel off or some guy in a garage with an ancient iPhone and the personality/content is better but it’s unwatchable. This is the best of both worlds. These videos are always full of great information. Highly slept on channel.
I'm not quite sure what 'slept on channel' means, but I completely agree with Carson. You're doing a great service with these videos, can't wait for the next installment.
Awesome. This was the most enlightening video I have seen about chassis design. I will see a whole new universe unfold before my eyes when I look at sports cars and race cars. I hope my comment and like helps UA-cam to spread this series far and wide.
Look forward to the next vid. I used to have breakfast on race days at my local circuit in the scrutineering bay, checking out the cars before going out on post as a marshal. The single seaters would have bodywork removed, showing all you have talked about here.
Good stuff. I came across your channel a while ago while searching for info about the type 49 (I love that era). You just popped into my feed again, so subscribing 👍
I'm flabbergasted that this video and this channel has so few followers likes and comments... Absolutely top notch content Good sir. Being in the automotive industry myself I find it hard to find car channels that I like and content that isn't boring cringe or just overplayed, I often feel jaded seeing cars on UA-cam thinking that I don't know what the hype is about but your lotus your GT40 and the upcoming tunnel car blow my mind keep on going man!
Looking forward ot the next video, really enjoy your content. I played around making balsawood chassis years ago with paper skins. I think I would 3-D print them now for proof of concept type stuff.
Thanks for this intuitive explanation behind tube frame / space frame chassis. I have both of Kurt Bilinski's books (Kimini, Midlana), but I had exactly that reaction you described of finding the mess of tubes to be inscrutable. The beginning of your video also answers something important. My brother had described to me an idea of making a completely flexible chassis, so that the whole car becomes the "suspension". I could tell him THAT it's the opposite of what you normally want, but I couldn't say WHY that is the case. I think he'll be pleased to know actually some racecars did have flexy chassis, it's just as you said it makes tuning it a moving target.
There have been racing formulas like the old SCCA F440 where you weren’t allowed to have a suspension. Similar to a go kart. When that’s the case you WANT the chassis to flex but in very specific ways and amounts. But that’s another can of worms and that’s not a situation most people will ever encounter. If you have springs and shocks it’s easiest to let them do their job rather than the chassis.
I am super psyched I found this channel, have been wanting to learn more about moncoque construction similar to the old LOLA's. Subscribed and liked! I bought the same book at a garage sale when I was 7 years old.... I would read it, not really understanding what I was reading for many years, then one day after college I found the book again. With an engineering degree and a couple of years building racing engines, it ade much more sense, 45 years after purchase, it is still one of my favorite books, which I refer to multiple times a year..
I was going through the illustrations in it while I was editing the video, hading not read it in a while and realized it said everything I was saying but better. I should read it again. I think there’s a lot that I’ll understand and appreciate more now than the first time I read it.
Back when I was racing motorcycles in the 80s, the bikes were moving to aluminum tube frames. For racing, we had to add material to make it stiffer. The fancy teams used sheet aluminum that was bonded and riveted. They said that the aircraft bonding glue was the real strength, the rivet just held it in place until it set. When you were building your cars, you mentioned you just used rivets. Did you consider using aircraft bonding glues?
The answer to this is at the end of the video that’s coming out in 3 days. I’ve answered this question a couple dozen times in the comments of various videos so I just made sure to film the full explanation. Short answer is yes, adhesive is a great way to do it. I’ve used it in some projects and not in others. Ive had no problems with the chassis I didn’t use it in but would recommend it if you can get it.
Great synopsis/overview of vintage chassis design evolution however you neglected to credit the designers of the D-Type Jaguar for the "monocoque" type center bay in that wonderful race car which preceded the Lotus 25 by nearly a decade.
I said it had been introduced numerous times but that it became popular with the 25. There were monocoque cars made before WWII, well before the d-type. But I agree that I should take any opportunity to mention the d type.
Do you mean the car in the short where I asked for people to identify the car in the photo from Le Mans in 1966? That was correctly identified in the comments of that video as a Serenissima Jungla. www.tumblr.com/carsthatnevermadeitetc/176276544859/serenissima-jungla-1966-using-chassis-005 The Mirage's didn't appear till March the following year.
This channel is far and away my favorite automotive channel. Every video is extremely high quality without feeling corporate and soulless, which in the automotive sector is surprisingly hard to come by. Usually it’s either huge budget channels that feel off or some guy in a garage with an ancient iPhone and the personality/content is better but it’s unwatchable. This is the best of both worlds. These videos are always full of great information. Highly slept on channel.
I'm not quite sure what 'slept on channel' means, but I completely agree with Carson. You're doing a great service with these videos, can't wait for the next installment.
Thanks Ben. You’ve explained it so well. I’m really looking forward to this series. Cheers from Australia.
You have a gift for teaching you know? You can deconstruct the thinking behind complex stuff in simple steps. I love this!
Awesome. This was the most enlightening video I have seen about chassis design. I will see a whole new universe unfold before my eyes when I look at sports cars and race cars. I hope my comment and like helps UA-cam to spread this series far and wide.
Look forward to the next vid. I used to have breakfast on race days at my local circuit in the scrutineering bay, checking out the cars before going out on post as a marshal. The single seaters would have bodywork removed, showing all you have talked about here.
Graye video, I enjoyed watching. I'm looking forward for next one 🏎🏎
Good stuff. I came across your channel a while ago while searching for info about the type 49 (I love that era). You just popped into my feed again, so subscribing 👍
Awesome! Thank you!
I'm flabbergasted that this video and this channel has so few followers likes and comments... Absolutely top notch content Good sir. Being in the automotive industry myself I find it hard to find car channels that I like and content that isn't boring cringe or just overplayed, I often feel jaded seeing cars on UA-cam thinking that I don't know what the hype is about but your lotus your GT40 and the upcoming tunnel car blow my mind keep on going man!
Looking forward ot the next video, really enjoy your content. I played around making balsawood chassis years ago with paper skins. I think I would 3-D print them now for proof of concept type stuff.
Great walk through!
Thanks for this intuitive explanation behind tube frame / space frame chassis. I have both of Kurt Bilinski's books (Kimini, Midlana), but I had exactly that reaction you described of finding the mess of tubes to be inscrutable. The beginning of your video also answers something important. My brother had described to me an idea of making a completely flexible chassis, so that the whole car becomes the "suspension". I could tell him THAT it's the opposite of what you normally want, but I couldn't say WHY that is the case. I think he'll be pleased to know actually some racecars did have flexy chassis, it's just as you said it makes tuning it a moving target.
There have been racing formulas like the old SCCA F440 where you weren’t allowed to have a suspension. Similar to a go kart. When that’s the case you WANT the chassis to flex but in very specific ways and amounts. But that’s another can of worms and that’s not a situation most people will ever encounter. If you have springs and shocks it’s easiest to let them do their job rather than the chassis.
Excellent video, thank you for sharing. Looking forward to this series.
I am super psyched I found this channel, have been wanting to learn more about moncoque construction similar to the old LOLA's.
Subscribed and liked!
I bought the same book at a garage sale when I was 7 years old.... I would read it, not really understanding what I was reading for many years, then one day after college I found the book again. With an engineering degree and a couple of years building racing engines, it ade much more sense, 45 years after purchase, it is still one of my favorite books, which I refer to multiple times a year..
I was going through the illustrations in it while I was editing the video, hading not read it in a while and realized it said everything I was saying but better. I should read it again. I think there’s a lot that I’ll understand and appreciate more now than the first time I read it.
Thanks for taking the time to disec the intricacies of chassis building..
Thanks man, I do race and have a vested interest in your approach on chasis building..
I’ve seen your channel! You do a lot of awesome things! I could learn a few things from you…
Back when I was racing motorcycles in the 80s, the bikes were moving to aluminum tube frames. For racing, we had to add material to make it stiffer. The fancy teams used sheet aluminum that was bonded and riveted. They said that the aircraft bonding glue was the real strength, the rivet just held it in place until it set.
When you were building your cars, you mentioned you just used rivets. Did you consider using aircraft bonding glues?
The answer to this is at the end of the video that’s coming out in 3 days. I’ve answered this question a couple dozen times in the comments of various videos so I just made sure to film the full explanation. Short answer is yes, adhesive is a great way to do it. I’ve used it in some projects and not in others. Ive had no problems with the chassis I didn’t use it in but would recommend it if you can get it.
Great synopsis/overview of vintage chassis design evolution however you neglected to credit the designers of the D-Type Jaguar for the "monocoque" type center bay in that wonderful race car which preceded the Lotus 25 by nearly a decade.
I said it had been introduced numerous times but that it became popular with the 25. There were monocoque cars made before WWII, well before the d-type. But I agree that I should take any opportunity to mention the d type.
👍👍😎👍👍
Trever ( TVR )use to send his cars / chassis with engines to the USA back in the 50s look up tvr open tops on the Net...
I think that is a Ford Mirage in the book you had. They were trialed at Le Mans but never raced there.
Do you mean the car in the short where I asked for people to identify the car in the photo from Le Mans in 1966? That was correctly identified in the comments of that video as a Serenissima Jungla.
www.tumblr.com/carsthatnevermadeitetc/176276544859/serenissima-jungla-1966-using-chassis-005
The Mirage's didn't appear till March the following year.
@@benbeames You are correct.
build it and they will come. The subscribers I mean
Ben, do you have an Instagram? Would love to follow if you do