Track Car Dashboard
Discussion
I've posted this in the French section but it's a quiet part of the forum so replies are few and far between.
Can anyone suggest a sensible 'dash' solution for the below problem?
It's a track car, but needs to work on the road. And (maybe) a few Hill Climb events (so MSA friendly?) Doesn't have to look pretty, only need's to function.
I'm new to this so ideas and parts suppliers are thin on the ground for me!
Can anyone suggest a sensible 'dash' solution for the below problem?
It's a track car, but needs to work on the road. And (maybe) a few Hill Climb events (so MSA friendly?) Doesn't have to look pretty, only need's to function.
I'm new to this so ideas and parts suppliers are thin on the ground for me!
Ah, good question! I should have said...
I can, but it's quite heavy and if there's a better (lighter) way of making the car work, I'd favour that.
At the moment my best solution (save hacking the existing dash and mashing it back in - I'm not great with these things) is to cable tie absolutely everything. Which kind of makes me sad after browsing Google images and seeing all kinds of professional looking carbon fibre solutions!
I can, but it's quite heavy and if there's a better (lighter) way of making the car work, I'd favour that.
At the moment my best solution (save hacking the existing dash and mashing it back in - I'm not great with these things) is to cable tie absolutely everything. Which kind of makes me sad after browsing Google images and seeing all kinds of professional looking carbon fibre solutions!
Put the dash back in with cut outs to where the cage is in the way.
Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
rallycross said:
Put the dash back in with cut outs to where the cage is in the way.
Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
I appreciate the input but I'm not sure I would agree... the weight saving may be negligible but, for me, the stripped back look and feel is all part of the fun! True Im not racing it, but I'd like to (finances permitting) and I'd like it to be as close to that purpose as possible. Both practically and financially!Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
Dash or no, it's never going to be 'nice' again. But that's OK! : )
Thinking along the same lines for my E30, for which there are 1 piece moulded alternatives in carbon & grp available but typically only in lhd form.
Would be reluctant to make something up from sheet ally. Might look tidy but I'd be too concerned about the possibility of multiple flying guillotine blades in the event of a big accident.
Would be reluctant to make something up from sheet ally. Might look tidy but I'd be too concerned about the possibility of multiple flying guillotine blades in the event of a big accident.
Boring_Chris said:
rallycross said:
Put the dash back in with cut outs to where the cage is in the way.
Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
I appreciate the input but I'm not sure I would agree... the weight saving may be negligible but, for me, the stripped back look and feel is all part of the fun! True Im not racing it, but I'd like to (finances permitting) and I'd like it to be as close to that purpose as possible. Both practically and financially!Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
Dash or no, it's never going to be 'nice' again. But that's OK! : )
Real racing cars don't do this. Real racing cars keep power steering and air conditioning too, because both make you faster, not slower. I'm aware of the arguments used, but they usually fall somewhere between misguided and complete bks. You need real 'racecar' prep here, not 'because racecar' prep.
I've just looked at a larger version of the picture and you don't have a hope of passing scrutineering - even if its Stevie Wonder. You need to either replace the door cards or fit thin aluminium sheet to protect yourself from the sharp edges. You need to refit the dashboard to protect your legs from all of the nasty sharp edges that you have exposed and you need to ensure that you can get in and out of the car quickly, because whilst it could be the angle of the photograph causing it, it looks as though the door bars are far too high.
GC8 said:
Boring_Chris said:
rallycross said:
Put the dash back in with cut outs to where the cage is in the way.
Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
I appreciate the input but I'm not sure I would agree... the weight saving may be negligible but, for me, the stripped back look and feel is all part of the fun! True Im not racing it, but I'd like to (finances permitting) and I'd like it to be as close to that purpose as possible. Both practically and financially!Dash or no dash - the weight loss will make as near as no noticeable difference to a track car, will be far better with a functioning dash back in there.
I dont know why people strip bare track cars?
There is no timing allowed on track, you are not racing, wrecking the inside of a car to save a few KG that's never going to make the slightest bit of difference to your track day enjoyment seems like a pointless exercise and ruins the car.
Dash or no, it's never going to be 'nice' again. But that's OK! : )
Real racing cars don't do this. Real racing cars keep power steering and air conditioning too, because both make you faster, not slower. I'm aware of the arguments used, but they usually fall somewhere between misguided and complete bks. You need real 'racecar' prep here, not 'because racecar' prep.
I've just looked at a larger version of the picture and you don't have a hope of passing scrutineering - even if its Stevie Wonder. You need to either replace the door cards or fit thin aluminium sheet to protect yourself from the sharp edges. You need to refit the dashboard to protect your legs from all of the nasty sharp edges that you have exposed and you need to ensure that you can get in and out of the car quickly, because whilst it could be the angle of the photograph causing it, it looks as though the door bars are far too high.
Oh, and re; getting in and out. It's fine. In that, I can. It's no harder than my VX220. Would it be how quickly 'I' can get out in a hurry, or 'you'... i.e. the tester?
Edited by Boring_Chris on Thursday 14th July 18:33
Sorry to resurrect an old thread but I'm still stuck on this.
The original dash isnt going back in. The front bar wont allow it (the bolt in points on the bulkhead are at the same height as the bar. I'd have to cut the dash right back, which would cut into the bolts on the actually dash)
Can anyone point me in the direction of somewhere that builds custom dashboards? Doesn't have to be pretty - just functional. And maybe offers enough to see it through basic track day / hill climb scrutineers.
The original dash isnt going back in. The front bar wont allow it (the bolt in points on the bulkhead are at the same height as the bar. I'd have to cut the dash right back, which would cut into the bolts on the actually dash)
Can anyone point me in the direction of somewhere that builds custom dashboards? Doesn't have to be pretty - just functional. And maybe offers enough to see it through basic track day / hill climb scrutineers.
Edited by Boring_Chris on Thursday 8th December 11:16
What are you after reinstating for road use? vents? switches etc?
As long as things are tidied and firmly fixed, I cant see any issues with keeping it bare from a scrutineering point of view.
If you want things like vents back then I would look at cutting up the old dash and locally reinstating parts of it around the cage.
Alternatively go for something like this if you want serious maxpower credits.
As long as things are tidied and firmly fixed, I cant see any issues with keeping it bare from a scrutineering point of view.
If you want things like vents back then I would look at cutting up the old dash and locally reinstating parts of it around the cage.
Alternatively go for something like this if you want serious maxpower credits.
Haha. That actually makes a lot of sense...
It would be nice to get a proper speedo surround in there, though. Plus, as you say, heaters and whatnot. It needs to work on the road, so de-misters are a must.
It's looking like I'll just have to get creative with whatever I can find. I just figured this would be a common problem for which there'd be professionals out there who could wave a magic wand at the damn thing! Ha.
It would be nice to get a proper speedo surround in there, though. Plus, as you say, heaters and whatnot. It needs to work on the road, so de-misters are a must.
It's looking like I'll just have to get creative with whatever I can find. I just figured this would be a common problem for which there'd be professionals out there who could wave a magic wand at the damn thing! Ha.
Gassing Station | Track Days | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff