repairing suspension mounts?
Discussion
You can repair them,people have.I personally wouldn't fancy owning them if they have been.I know that by welding, you should re temper the alloy hard again, as welding it makes it soft. Best bet, although long winded in changing it is a replacement Chassis.It doesn't have to be new, as many cars are written off by bodywork repair costs.
Mr_C said:
You can repair them by buying a new chassis - about £3500 i think for an S1.
Not recommended to repair any other way really mate, sadly.
+1Not recommended to repair any other way really mate, sadly.
There's a Exige GT3 on eBay right now, with significant chassis damage. It has been brought in from Japan and is advertised as unrecorded and HPI-clear...
tlracing said:
Mr_C said:
You can repair them by buying a new chassis - about £3500 i think for an S1.
Not recommended to repair any other way really mate, sadly.
+1Not recommended to repair any other way really mate, sadly.
There's a Exige GT3 on eBay right now, with significant chassis damage. It has been brought in from Japan and is advertised as unrecorded and HPI-clear...
Justin S said:
You can repair them,people have.I personally wouldn't fancy owning them if they have been.I know that by welding, you should re temper the alloy hard again, as welding it makes it soft. Best bet, although long winded in changing it is a replacement Chassis.It doesn't have to be new, as many cars are written off by bodywork repair costs.
Welding these bits always looked iffy to me - pretty close to some bonded joints, plus as you say, plenty of potential to upset the original heat treatment.I would have thought a bonded / riveted repair would be more viable - that's the engineer in me speaking - wuld imagine any sign of a repair in these areas would send most buyers running a mile...
NDT said:
Justin S said:
You can repair them,people have.I personally wouldn't fancy owning them if they have been.I know that by welding, you should re temper the alloy hard again, as welding it makes it soft. Best bet, although long winded in changing it is a replacement Chassis.It doesn't have to be new, as many cars are written off by bodywork repair costs.
Welding these bits always looked iffy to me - pretty close to some bonded joints, plus as you say, plenty of potential to upset the original heat treatment.I would have thought a bonded / riveted repair would be more viable - that's the engineer in me speaking - wuld imagine any sign of a repair in these areas would send most buyers running a mile...
whilst it's techincally possible to do a dencent repair, nobody is going to do it as the work required (and facilities/etc) would make it too costly..
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