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Author: Subject: Gull-wing doors and windshield material
mranlet

posted on 30/7/03 at 04:09 PM Reply With Quote
Gull-wing doors and windshield material

Hey all,
I'm making a hardtop for my car with a targa-style roof. I'm also going to have minuature doors with lowering windows that will hinge away in one way or another. However, I'm not sure what the best way to achieve this is. The appendix in the book shows several Locosts with a double-overhead-bar style roll cage ()which my build will include) and at least one caption mentions that the owner is planning to fit gullwing doors. Does anyone have gullwings installed or know of anywhere where I might find pictures of gullwing assemblies?
I'd like to have both a semi-removable roof and doors that make getting in and out as easy as possible, and designing them so as not to be mutually exclusive has proven somewhat difficult... I'm thinking that it might be coolest to have suicide style doors and a seperate panel on each side at the top that would rotate up when the door opens and be pulled closed when the door closes. I've been condering the idea of using a cable system from bicycle brakes to squeze the top panel closed and have a spring return to open it (the panel will most likely be a piece of acrylic or fiberglass, so weight isn't a big issue). I could have the rotating panels sit in a locking slot for easy removal when I want to have the car be in targa mode.

I've also thought about having jack-knife / Lamborgnini style doors or angled jack-knofe doors with a lightweight frame along the roof that would retain the targa panel.

In a somewhat unrelated subject - I know that many racers, including those at Le Mans 24 hour, use Lexan or acrylic sheet for the windshield. I know that Foose hot rods also use acrylic sheet that is molded to shape by a specialist. Question is: would I be able to introduce a curve into a piece of acrylic by creating a form and heating it with a heat gun and still have it be resistant to scratching and chipping? I am quite the acrylic sculptor, but I've never had any of my bits be exposed to 80mph highway or 150mph track driving.

Thanks for any light that you folks may be able to shed on this!
-MR

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mranlet

posted on 31/7/03 at 03:54 PM Reply With Quote
Maybe there's too much to read there...

I'm trying to fit gullwing, jack-knife, or hybrid doors, what would be the best way to do this?
Does anyone know of any pictures that illustrate this?

Can Lexan or Acrylic sheet be used for the windscreen?

Thanks
-MR

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andyps

posted on 31/7/03 at 07:07 PM Reply With Quote
definitely not locost, but have a look at the doors on an ultima - they are gull wing, probably fibreglass and perspex/polycarbonate.

They work and stay on at 200mph!





Andy

An expert is someone who knows more and more about less and less

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mickeeblooeyes

posted on 22/8/03 at 01:13 PM Reply With Quote
I have pondered about the same thing. I am one of those people who is considering a locost because it is low cost. I t also has to be a practical everyday car. And that includes the changeable British weather. Soft tops seem to be a soft option and I would feel more 'secure' with a hard top. Gull winged doors first caught my eye when I first saw 'Back to the future'. They seemed to maximise space with convenience. So I also intend to build a hard top with removeable doors! Any information I find, I will gladly share.
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carcentric

posted on 22/8/03 at 01:57 PM Reply With Quote
An answer and an idea

First, Lexan holds up pretty well to windshield use for racing. Over here, at least, it's illegal to use anything other than laminated safety glass for a windshield on public roads, however. There are special cleaners and polishing compounds you can use to keep it clear for a while, but eventually sand-pitting will ruin it and wipers leave scratches almost immediately. The good thing is that if you have the mold, it's not a big deal to make another every other year.

Second, a much simpler approach to the opening top: hinge the whole hard top at the rear and use soft top latches to hold the front on. Add something like a Triumph Spitfire bonnet support (folding rod with "locking knee" feature) to hold it in the up position for ingress/egress. Locost yet unique!

[Edited on 22/8/03 by carcentric]





M D "Doc" Nugent
http://www.carcentric.com

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Noodle

posted on 22/8/03 at 02:21 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by mickeeblooeyes
Gull winged doors first caught my eye when I first saw 'Back to the future'. They seemed to maximise space with convenience.

Try opening the doors in your local-multi storey car park! Scissor doors would be more convienient.

Neil.

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mickeeblooeyes

posted on 22/8/03 at 03:37 PM Reply With Quote
Mr Noodle,
What is the average height of a Lowcost?

Then please consider the following equation:

v = C - (Hx2)

C = Average Ceiling height
H = Average height of Lowcost

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JoelP

posted on 22/8/03 at 08:55 PM Reply With Quote
What does the 'v' equal? Would that be the gap left? Doors like a bugatti eb110 would be neat, are they what would be called jackknife or scissor doors? They look much better than gullwing doors.

[Edited on 22/8/03 by JoelP]

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Noodle

posted on 22/8/03 at 09:18 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by mickeeblooeyes
Mr Noodle,
What is the average height of a Lowcost?

Then please consider the following equation:

v = C - (Hx2)

C = Average Ceiling height
H = Average height of Lowcost

Yes, yes. It was the arc the travel through when opening I was pointing out. Could take a swipe at some mummies Discovery adjacently parked.

Some super clever hinges could sort it, but it'd be a lot of work.

ATB

Neil

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mickeeblooeyes

posted on 27/8/03 at 08:48 AM Reply With Quote
MR Noodle.
Consider the idea of a targa top with the T-bar being the pivot point. The doors would have no swing-out because at close they would be at 270 degree point and opening would swing through to 360 degree point. Light weight doors with gas rams for lift, removeable pivot pins and you have the targa/ gull wing solution.

And yes V does equal the space left. Perhaps I should have explained myself better!
Oops.

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Noodle

posted on 27/8/03 at 09:13 AM Reply With Quote
Mr BlooEyes,

Were you perchace considering something like this?
(With acknowledgment to David Ashurt's photo archive)



Cheers,

Neil.

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mranlet

posted on 28/8/03 at 10:06 PM Reply With Quote
Hmmn... thought that this post had died...

Given the narrow cabin width of the Locost, the extra space needed on either side of the car to clear any cars parked next to you is minimal - the distance from the pivot point to the adjacent car would be much in excess of the arc length required for a gullwing. DeLoreans, Mercedes, etc. would be more prone to door-scratching since they are much wider cars with much larger doors (refering to the distance between pivot point and lower door edge).

I'm not so much worried about hacing enough clearance as I am about constructing doors that would be lightweight enough to be lifted with minimal ram-assist and strong enough to stay shut and be rigid at speed. I have thought about scissor or jacknife doors, but gullwing would ultimately make the most sense.

The flip-up roof idea is something which I have thought about, and is intriguing, but I would be warry that the seal between the lid and window frame/window would be a tricky thing to master, and would undermine the point of a hard top if done unsuccessfully.

I am envisioning my doors to be similar in structure to those of the Callaway C7, with 3/4 of the window panels lowering much like the old Subaru SVX's, and a removable tinted Lexan panel overhead to create a pseudo-targa top (given that sealing them off from water is not a problem)

I'll keep you all updated as I progress and come up with drawings
-MR

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macspeedy

posted on 29/8/03 at 06:45 PM Reply With Quote
Windshield? Rescued attachment S1-bild-overall.jpg
Rescued attachment S1-bild-overall.jpg

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thekafer

posted on 5/9/03 at 04:08 AM Reply With Quote
gull wing doors/fun with paper

What i did was to get a good head-on drawing of a seven.I enlarged it on a copier and then cut out a profile of what I thought might work as a door.Mine had the hinge about 4 inches from center.Then I tacked it at point so I could check out the swing.It barely swings away from the car at all!Try it,you'll see what I mean.My idea was to make a composite top&doors using e-glass w/a nomex or clegicell foam core.I was going to leave the core out where ever a window was to go, cut the hole leaving a flange I could either bond or fasten the lexan to from the inside.The doors would be extremely light and ridgid.A relatively modest pair of gas struts(15 to 20lbs w/6" throw) with "an over center geometry"would not only lift and hold them open but also help hold them closed. The challenge for me is going to be anticipating seal thicknesses and faying surfaces so that when the doors are closed you dont still have that "wind in your hair" driving thrill. It would be neat if the doors pip pinned in so that they were easily removed. Just a thought! Fletch
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mranlet

posted on 5/9/03 at 03:11 PM Reply With Quote
Yeah, that's what I'm talking about. Space on the side of the car for door swing is not a problem on a car this small and short.

I was thinking a similar thing about having the doors be removable, but I would prefer having a tighter hinge and more secure structure with a piano-hinge style connection and make the overhead panel removable and the window retractable.

In my photo album is a crude and older drawing of that the door (on the Kamikaze) will look like, with the black line partway into the window being the H-shaped weatherstripping that joind the lower retractable window portion with the upper fixed portion Subrau SVX style.

-MR

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