MK SPRINT - R
Author
Discussion

fuoriserie

Original Poster:

4,560 posts

293 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
Just found this very interesting kit, it could be a perfect track racer at a reasonable price....
What do you guys think? I like the concept of this kit, and I guess you could change the styling if you wanted something different.

Without the bodywork, It looks like a simpler single seater, Atom inspired kitcar.

Nice, check :

ttp://www.mkdevelopments.co.uk/mksprintr

Edited by fuoriserie on Friday 29th September 09:26

lightspear27

90 posts

249 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all

Hi fuoriserie,

I think it's a really good kit ... track weapon ... road fun ... and the self builder (or designer ;-) ) could change its looks quite easily to make it a modern single seater.

The sprint-r looks good and should also be good on the road or track because of its simplicity.

And that price! really good given the fun you can have with it.

Only the design can be judged a little bit dated by some people ... simplicity dictate some forms but as you pointed ... there is place for improvement of the looks.


With all those chassis and part built picutres on the Mk site you have what you need to post a few sketches of what could be a modern single seater based on the Sprint-r ... please!

As a Ginetta owner I really liked your proposals for a new G12 on the Ginetta Forum ... good job! Please make us dream with an (already) updated design for the sprint-r.

lightspear27

90 posts

249 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all

Just a silly (or not so silly) idea ...

To keep costs low (as well as the weight), why not to use a few grp parts (nose cone, rear end, ...) and cover the body with fabric ?!

fuoriserie

Original Poster:

4,560 posts

293 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
lightspear27 said:

Just a silly (or not so silly) idea ...

To keep costs low (as well as the weight), why not to use a few grp parts (nose cone, rear end, ...) and cover the body with fabric ?!

Hi Lightspear27
Actually it's a very interesting idea,............just for fun I will work on something....but can't promise on the outcome...

Edited by fuoriserie on Friday 29th September 09:59


Edited by fuoriserie on Friday 29th September 10:00

fuoriserie

Original Poster:

4,560 posts

293 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
lightspear27 said:


As a Ginetta owner I really liked your proposals for a new G12 on the Ginetta Forum ... good job! .


Hi Lightspear27

Thanks for your comments, but will try to work a more feasible proposal on another chassis..

lightspear27

90 posts

249 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all

the fabric body idea came from the Velorex 3wheeler ... http://home.hccnet.nl/r.loman/r6.JPG

fuoriserie

Original Poster:

4,560 posts

293 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
Just found this.

www.microcarmuseum.com/tour/velorex.html

Iit must be a fabric that can handle rain, it says vynil in the article, but maybe modern taurpalin or a polyester fabric today would do the trick.

Edited by fuoriserie on Friday 29th September 11:02

blanc

221 posts

263 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
There's a bit more info here.

I think it looks pretty good.

www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=51834

grahambell

2,720 posts

299 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
fuoriserie said:
lightspear27 said:

Just a silly (or not so silly) idea ...

To keep costs low (as well as the weight), why not to use a few grp parts (nose cone, rear end, ...) and cover the body with fabric ?!

Hi Lightspear27
Actually it's a very interesting idea,............just for fun I will work on something....but can't promise on the outcome...



Ah yes, fabric bodied cars - big in the 1920/30s apparently, so it's certainly been done before.

lightspear27

90 posts

249 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all

yes, planes were also made of wood and fabric in their early days!

I think with modern recent materials it would be possible to obtain an interesting design. The car manufacturer would not have to develop moulds and the car builder/owner could change the body colour in a few minutes. good for avertisings on the cars body too.

imagine an Atom Ariel with a fabric skin ... it would still look good and would be more practical without weighting much more than it weights without the fabric body/skin.

Go to and from the track with the body/skin on ... remove it for maximum sensation/fun on track or on sunny/dry days ... light, easy to store, easy to replace/repair, ... lots of potential

MTv Dave

2,101 posts

280 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
Sounds like fun, though you still need a body frame to stretch the fabric across, so my chassis covered in cloth would look a bit... odd

lightspear27

90 posts

249 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all

not really a body frame but a chassis designed with the fabric body in mind

or

a few (little) grp body parts (front -or nose cone-, rear "bumper", ...) to stretch the fabric over

fuoriserie

Original Poster:

4,560 posts

293 months

Friday 29th September 2006
quotequote all
lightspear27 said:

not really a body frame but a chassis designed with the fabric body in mind

or

a few (little) grp body parts (front -or nose cone-, rear "bumper", ...) to stretch the fabric over


That is the idea....working on something....