I thought I would start a new thread to document the build of my new gravel specification K11. If nothing else it will give me something to look back on to remind myself that progress, albeit slow, is being made on the car over the coming months.
Ask any time served car club anorak who has toiled away for months or years and invested all of his spare time and money, plus a bit more and then some credit cards, and they will say never build a car. Just buy one complete and go from there. It’s cheaper.
So with the mantra of ‘don’t build a car, don’t build a car’ ringing around my head I walked one hundred yards up the hill from my house to buy a car. To build into a rally car.
I have deliberately not set myself a deadline for this project. This is partly due to the fact I am very lazy and easily distracted, partly due to the cost of it and partly because I plan to disappear to the Alps in December ’09 to go snowboarding for six months.
Despite building a car previously, my mechanical skills are not great but I can be quite artistic at times so at least the car will end up looking pretty.
The rough plan at the moment is as follows:
1. Weld in roll cage, decent seats, belts, cut offs and fire extinguishers. I’m older and wiser now and it takes longer to heal.
2. Keep the engine and transmission fairly standard. I will fit a diff and a cam but that’s about it.
3. Get some decent dampers on it.
4. Spend some time making it look pretty by fitting carbon fibre door and quarter cards, braided hoses and wiring, flocked dash, upright hydraulic handbrake etc.
The very definite plan at the moment is as follows:
1. Do not make it wide-track. Do not make it wide-track. (This will be printed out and put on the garage wall).
I have a wish list of parts and I have a realistic list of parts so hopefully I will end up with a happy medium. I also have a ‘To Do’ list as long as my lanky arms and legs put together. I will try and keep this diary up to date, because I’m a bit geeky like that, and upload a few pictures along the way to illustrate progress, or the lack of it.
Having worked for a World Rally Team for nearly five years I have picked up a few tips about car preparation which I hope to employ on this build. These mainly involve using the right fasteners and materials to make the car strong, aesthetically pleasing and most importantly, easy to work on when I break it.
I also have some good contacts for parts, which I hope to be able to utilise to keep the costs to a minimum. The aim is to build the car for less than the cost of a front cross member for a Ford Focus World Rally Car. That will be £4,500.
Ask any time served car club anorak who has toiled away for months or years and invested all of his spare time and money, plus a bit more and then some credit cards, and they will say never build a car. Just buy one complete and go from there. It’s cheaper.
So with the mantra of ‘don’t build a car, don’t build a car’ ringing around my head I walked one hundred yards up the hill from my house to buy a car. To build into a rally car.
I have deliberately not set myself a deadline for this project. This is partly due to the fact I am very lazy and easily distracted, partly due to the cost of it and partly because I plan to disappear to the Alps in December ’09 to go snowboarding for six months.
Despite building a car previously, my mechanical skills are not great but I can be quite artistic at times so at least the car will end up looking pretty.
The rough plan at the moment is as follows:
1. Weld in roll cage, decent seats, belts, cut offs and fire extinguishers. I’m older and wiser now and it takes longer to heal.
2. Keep the engine and transmission fairly standard. I will fit a diff and a cam but that’s about it.
3. Get some decent dampers on it.
4. Spend some time making it look pretty by fitting carbon fibre door and quarter cards, braided hoses and wiring, flocked dash, upright hydraulic handbrake etc.
The very definite plan at the moment is as follows:
1. Do not make it wide-track. Do not make it wide-track. (This will be printed out and put on the garage wall).
I have a wish list of parts and I have a realistic list of parts so hopefully I will end up with a happy medium. I also have a ‘To Do’ list as long as my lanky arms and legs put together. I will try and keep this diary up to date, because I’m a bit geeky like that, and upload a few pictures along the way to illustrate progress, or the lack of it.
Having worked for a World Rally Team for nearly five years I have picked up a few tips about car preparation which I hope to employ on this build. These mainly involve using the right fasteners and materials to make the car strong, aesthetically pleasing and most importantly, easy to work on when I break it.
I also have some good contacts for parts, which I hope to be able to utilise to keep the costs to a minimum. The aim is to build the car for less than the cost of a front cross member for a Ford Focus World Rally Car. That will be £4,500.