Haynes : Locost

Author
Discussion

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,577 posts

259 months

Thursday 14th August 2003
quotequote all
Hi guys,

I'm just about to finish my degree and I've got a job lined up. Wondering how to blow my first paychecque.

When haynes say 'build a car for £250' how close are they to the truth?

I know I'll have extra expenses hiring equipment and buying tools, but can anyone give me an estimate?

Also, how long will it take to build working weekends only?

Cheers,

Al.

Stig

11,818 posts

285 months

Thursday 14th August 2003
quotequote all
To build one for 250 quid would give you a shed of a car.

Given that a MKII Escort donor will cost at least 150 these day, the cortina uprights are 50quid a pair from the scrappy, raw materials for the chassis will cost 100+ and about 250 for the GRP (you can see where I'm going here ) it's gonna cost you a lot more.

That said, there's no reason why you couldn't have a half decent car on the road for 1500 quid or so. But if you want a reasonably finished example, more like 3k.

Or you could build a race one and spend 6-7k+!

Time taken to build depends on how much you're willing to do, how much is pre-fab and how much cash you've got.

It's very rewarding though. Have a look at my Locost racing site (if you haven't already) www.locost-racing.com for a complete build etc.

AJLintern

4,202 posts

264 months

Thursday 14th August 2003
quotequote all
I doubt you'd be able to do it for £250. The book assumes you'd find a rusty MOT failure Mk2 Escort for a few quid and make absolutely everything yourself using offcuts of metal tube. I'd be looking to spend about £2k if I wanted to do it properly on a budget.

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,577 posts

259 months

Thursday 14th August 2003
quotequote all
That's more like what I was expecting, and currently out of my price range, but not for long.

I've been mad on the idea of building my own car for ages now. I think I'll buy the book and see what I can do with the methods it mentions and the local scrapyards.


Vauxhall Carlton as a donor car maybe... Completely self-designed chasis.

I just want practice for now. Road legal would be nice. My dream is to build an Ultima, (inspired, I don't mind admitting), by Stig's car!

Stig

11,818 posts

285 months

Thursday 14th August 2003
quotequote all
_Al_ said:
That's more like what I was expecting, and currently out of my price range, but not for long.

I've been mad on the idea of building my own car for ages now. I think I'll buy the book and see what I can do with the methods it mentions and the local scrapyards.

Vauxhall Carlton as a donor car maybe... Completely self-designed chasis.

I just want practice for now. Road legal would be nice. My dream is to build an Ultima, (inspired, I don't mind admitting), by Stig's car!


Good man!

Remember, once upon a time the Ultima was just a dream for me too!!

AJLintern

4,202 posts

264 months

Thursday 14th August 2003
quotequote all
I really want to build my own design of sportscar one day, so I bought the book for ideas really, to see how one would go about building that style of car. I want to build a lightweight mid engined GT, similar to a Ginetta G12 - maybe with a 993 flat-6

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,577 posts

259 months

Thursday 14th August 2003
quotequote all
AJ, that's exactly what I was thinking (though not the Ginetta, entirely my own design). I was drooling over a written off MR2 a while back. Front end smash otherwise fine.

I think I'll do something Locost esq and practice on a trackday or two before re-assessing my budget. I've told a friend about this now and he wants to get involved, both helping and financially, so that's first class news!

Cheers guys, 'talk' to you later.


P.s, that's a great Site Stig. It's killed my afternoon beautifully.

>> Edited by _Al_ on Thursday 14th August 17:01

peetbee

1,036 posts

256 months

Friday 15th August 2003
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If you're still interested in this, especially for changes to the chassis or the donor from the book, then try www.locostbuilders.co.uk They even have a sections for bike engined and mid engined cars.

There is a lot of useful information and advice on there. I have also heard rumours that Haynes will be doing a new version of their book that is meant to use the Sierra as a donor which could make life a bit easier.


>> Edited by peetbee on Friday 15th August 09:21

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,577 posts

259 months

Friday 15th August 2003
quotequote all
peetbee said:
mid engined cars.





The one featuring the sierra sounds worth waiting for. Think I'll use the time till it appears to try and find a welding refresher course.

Mark Benson

7,521 posts

270 months

Friday 15th August 2003
quotequote all
One word of advice - the book doesn't give the complete novice a step by step guide to building the car. Quite often he skips from part to fully-built component with no explaination of how he reached that point.
Stigs site and the Locost builders site are great resources, if you go the Locost route, you'll use them a lot.

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,577 posts

259 months

Friday 15th August 2003
quotequote all
Mark, as mentioned above I'm going to try a 'throwaway' project first. Going to try and gut a rear-drive car for mechanicals (say a vauxhall carlton) then try and squeeze it into a small car, building/buying frames, mounts, new suspension and other necessary bits as I go.


Does that sound like a good way to practice? Anyone recommend a small car that'd take a carlton setup easily?