The Truth about Fibre Glass Front Ends

The Truth about Fibre Glass Front Ends

Author
Discussion

TVR SLag's BiL

Original Poster:

5,281 posts

253 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
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Has anyone ever fitted one? Do they fit ok? Any problems with paint cracking?

I have a steel removable front end at the moment, its only a year old and its going rusty!

Dodgy Dave

810 posts

258 months

Sunday 28th March 2004
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All i know is that they are a tough job to fit and that you have to weld in bracing to replace the support of the inner wings which you remove!
Worth the hassle though
I wonder what weight saings it gives??

Sorry cant be more help but im sure your gonna get lots more

Cooperman

4,428 posts

257 months

Monday 29th March 2004
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I've probably posted on this topic before, but here goes again:
The Mini bodyshell is designed as a monocoque which means that all panels are stress carrying and all contribute to the excellent torsional rigidity which the Mini has, this in turn contributing to the fantastic handling/roadholding.
If you cut the front off and fit a flip-front, the new front will not be capable of carrying any structural loads. Thus you need to replace the load carrying capability from the original structure. But how is this done when you don't have the stress analysis details of the original? What happens is that people guess what additional strengthening is needed and you would never find out if you had it right unless you had a really big accident! It's the part-side impact crash-case which would worry me most. How is that load resolved with the front wings and inner wings, which in a standard front carry the loads into the front panel and thus into the sub-frame, now removed and replaced with a non-load-carrying one-piece front.
Be nervous, very nervous!!!

Peter

TVR SLag's BiL

Original Poster:

5,281 posts

253 months

Monday 29th March 2004
quotequote all
Cooperman said:
I've probably posted on this topic before, but here goes again:
The Mini bodyshell is designed as a monocoque which means that all panels are stress carrying and all contribute to the excellent torsional rigidity which the Mini has, this in turn contributing to the fantastic handling/roadholding.
If you cut the front off and fit a flip-front, the new front will not be capable of carrying any structural loads. Thus you need to replace the load carrying capability from the original structure. But how is this done when you don't have the stress analysis details of the original? What happens is that people guess what additional strengthening is needed and you would never find out if you had it right unless you had a really big accident! It's the part-side impact crash-case which would worry me most. How is that load resolved with the front wings and inner wings, which in a standard front carry the loads into the front panel and thus into the sub-frame, now removed and replaced with a non-load-carrying one-piece front.
Be nervous, very nervous!!!

Peter


eeerrrrrmmmmm.........So you dont think i should do it?

gtrclive

4,187 posts

290 months

Tuesday 30th March 2004
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8 Point rollcage with tie ins to the suspension points and front subframe. Better crash protection allround (door bars etc), increases ridgidity of shell/Monocop aswell. Down side extra wieght, but give me wieght better handling and safty over lightness anyday.

Plotloss

67,280 posts

277 months

Tuesday 30th March 2004
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Miglia spec in other words Clive.

Though I think they may be 10/12 point and a very complex array of tubes.

Fatboy has a welded cage and a GRP front and when following him he didnt seem to have any issues with flex.

Though if you are going to cut the front off I would recommend putting a proper cage in for the reasons that Cooperman states...

Paul V

4,489 posts

284 months

Tuesday 30th March 2004
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The fibreglass fronts often look wrong, I think the better ones have the separate bonnet so the front keeps the right lines.

They aren’t strong as a friend found out when he ran my old one over

A cage is always advisable in a mini, they aren’t the strongest of cars on the road.

Cooperman

4,428 posts

257 months

Tuesday 30th March 2004
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I have never been able to see the advantage of a flip front,either in steel or grp. By the time you've welded in lots of extra strengthening you probably dont have a weight advantage, then you add a roll cage which is c.20 kg to keep yourself safe, I reckon your car weighs more than it would have with a standard bodyshell. Remember also, a cage does not go very far forward into the footwell area, so the front bulkhead is still vulnerable.
If you want to improve accessibility to the engine, you can make the top section of the front panel removeable. To do this, move the loom out of the way, saw through the top section of the front panel about 3" in from each end. You then fold up 2 off 6" long nested sections in 16 swg steel and bolt these into each end. Use 4 off bolts of 1/4" unf on each side of the joins. With the grille mounted on grill buttons it makes access to the entire front of the engine so much easier.

gtrclive

4,187 posts

290 months

Tuesday 30th March 2004
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Make the engine easyer to work on, why not put it where the rear seats are .... Thats what I'm doing....

>> Edited by gtrclive on Tuesday 30th March 14:14