#1
|
|||
|
|||
ABS ? Power Steering?
Hi Guy's,
Ok, here is where I m at, I recently bought a part built venom GT2 kit which has all Granada breaks and hubs front and rear installed. It has a ford v6 installed as is the Gearbox, diff, powersteering rack, wiring loom and steering column. The frame is made from box section of about 40mm sq. It was bought for the right price as a donor vehicle and I would be quids in even if I only use the 4 corners, Diff and shafts. I have even looked at chopping the chassis so it is more or less the same shape as a haynes roadster, all be it the steelwork would be heavier, there would be less of it. Still thinking on that aspect of it.. Anyway, my questions are these at present, do you lot who use don parts from vehicles that had ABS actually reinstall the ABS on your kits or just bin it and stick with good old standard brake systems? Do any of you use power steering? Cheers Mark |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
Hi Mark....I do not know of any roadsters that have utilized any ABS or PS it just does not warrant it
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Cheers Kev, thats good news on the ABS front, I hated the thought of messing with all that wiring and sensors, not ideal news on the PS front as it means I need to source a rack but adain, looking on the positive side I can ditch the PS pipework and pump :-)
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
It's all unnecessary weight in a car the size of a Roadster, it's also more to go wrong!
Personally, I hate ABS. If I want to brake, I want to brake. I don't want the car to stop braking because it thinks I'm braking too hard! |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
If I was building from scratch i probably would fit ABS but only if all the parts were just sitting there on the donor car ready to be transplanted. I could see it might be a benefit in the wet and on icy roads. That said Ive found the braking quite adequate without it and must admit ive not taken it out in the snow.
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
ABS is vehicle specific and will not necessarily work correctly in a much lighter vehicle, a mate in Fords chassis engineering and dynamics have me this info when I mentioned it
Power steering, you can remove the pump and just fill the pipes with fluid and join The power rack is close to a quick rack ratio |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I will have to look at the rack and pipe work to get my head around the steering advice. Cheers. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Could be wrong ,if you fill the pas pipes on the rack and join them together the rack may not turn as there would be hydraulic pressure on both sides of the ram.
__________________
Cost : Little as possible. Thanks : To those who by their generosity my build has progressed. Its a handmade sports car not a flaming kit car !!! If at first you dont succeed,avoid skydiving... No parachute require to freefall,only if you want to do it twice. |
#9
|
||||
|
||||
Hi,
First post. You can join the tubes but you are still going to be pumping fluid so the steering will still be hard. You would need to de-power the rack by removing the piston on the rack which requires a full strip down but this would leave you with a properly de-powered quick rack. Here's how its done on the MX5 rack, it would be the same on most power steering racks. Cheers Stot |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Thanks Stot, I have bookmarked that link. I will enjoy stripping the rack ang doing it properly. Clearly the Ford rack will be different but. Now now the basic idea.
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|