Post 1626 on page 163
I agree the angle looks good. Somewhere between 10 and 20% downward is supposed to be ideal. Closer to 10 seems safer. The collapse in the seat i saw was from a very steep angle.Angle looks dead nuts with the seat back, and if we know Donovan there's some added beef behind that mount. My only concerns then would be A: belt stretch from such a long run and 2: how high does Donovan sit in the seat compared to the seat back? I'm a little long waisted and have to run without the cushion in my Camaro, otherwise I'm higher than the harness holes and that would compress my spine in a wreck. I can actually feel it squish me down merely tightening the harnesses. I just don't see setups like this at the race track, so I wonder if I'm not missing anything. Donovan have you considered making a harness bar for the car? That would kill the possible belt stretch concern.
I too made the run to Lethbridge. I never thought to check in with you gents. I will next time out.Drove 2 hours south to meet up with Cauterize and his fam for the Lethbridge swap meet today. Northernregal was supposed to join us as well, but unfortunately he had to work. Normally I come home empty handed from these things, but today was a success.
Thanks to Blane’s eagle eyes, I picked up this Edelbrock RPM Air Gap knockoff for cheap.
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Guy wanted $300 Canadian pesos for it, but after a little haggling, he ended up taking $185 for it. I’m actually quite impressed with the quality and the casting, it’s far better than one would think from an offshore knockoff. No pits, flashing or otherwise poor casting qualities, and looks to have been very lightly used.
After removing all the old owners junk off it and cleaning up the machined surfaces with nothing more than a rubber bristle Roloc disc, everything looks really really good.
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A little light pitting around the water jacket passages, but that’s to be expected. I was impressed that they weren’t all rotted out.
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This is the worst one, but it’s only to supply coolant to the heater hose:
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Next week I’ll take it into work and glass bead it in our blast cabinet, I can guarantee it’ll clean up like brand new.
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This should compliment the new cylinder heads quite nicely, it’s a substantial upgrade over my existing plain old Performer manifold. And like the heads, this too was part of the plan all along too. I would’ve preferred a genuine Edelbrock, but for the price, condition, and surprising apparent quality of this CrossWind one, I’ll take it. Worst case scenario, if for whatever reason it turns out to be a total POS, I’ll send it down the road to the next guy and go back to an Edelbrock.
Donovan, going back in time here. I recently found out that mounting belts that far away from the seat isn't a great idea. I'm not a physics major but it has something to do with leverage and length of belts that during a collision applies more force AND due to the stretch of excessive belt length, can cause the seat to actually buckle and collapse causing great bodily harm. Saw pictures of the collapse with belt mounting as you have. If wanted I can find article or video for you. I know it would be a royal pita to change what you have but for safety sake I feel that you should do some digging into this issue.
Is that for front seat 5/6 point harnesses? Well there is no back seat, so must be. The biggest thing to watch out for is the height of the anchor, it needs to be +/- an inch or so from the top of the driver's shoulders. Too low and you crush your spine in a wreck, too high and you're not held down in a rollover. With such a long run of harness, I would also be concerned about excessive stretch. Competition harnesses are designed to stretch in a wreck, that's the only give in a race car. No crumple zones, no airbags, etc.
Donovan have you considered making a harness bar for the car? That would kill the possible belt stretch concern.
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