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F/C chassis integrity

This is a discussion on F/C chassis integrity within the NHRA forum, part of the Pit Area category; -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Maybe Bob Meyer, our resident chassis fabricator can weigh in on this one. Close up on TV revealed the chassis ...


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Old 09-24-2007, 12:08 AM
Randy Goodwin's Avatar
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F/C chassis integrity

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Maybe Bob Meyer, our resident chassis fabricator can weigh in on this one.

Close up on TV revealed the chassis broke at locations where multiple welding of the tubes took place. The top frame rails broke where the cage meets the shoulder hoops and upright (and the upper frame rail is doubled in that area). The bottom frame rails broke where the "K" or X" member meets near the uprights that connect the bottom frame rails to the top. The upright is also used to support the lower seat bar. One side appeared to have the upright detached from the lower frame rail as well as the lower frame rail being broken.

I have seen many violent crashes including Force's many years ago where a tire let go, the car hits the wall, etc., etc. but the tubing never failed at all 4 points like this one did. And Force's failed without any impact at all. His car was pulled apart by the decelleration of the chutes.

My question is: If the tubing is heat treated prior to assembly then the points where the tubes come together are welded with multiple tubes hitting close to each other what does that due to the integrity of the heat treated tubing? I have heard complaints that welded heat treated tubing becomes brittle. Is this a true statement? Looks like it to me.

I understand that non-heat treated tubing is not as adversely effected by welds. Also, I know one chassis builder who intentionally staggers the lower "X" member to keep the number of welds in one area to a minimum.

Having worked with chrome moly I find it hard to believe it could just fail for no reason.

Force's deal could have been a lot worse. Our prayers go out to him for a speedy recovery.

RG
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Old 09-24-2007, 12:10 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

Whoever deleted the rest of this thread PM me please.
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Old 09-24-2007, 12:19 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

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Originally Posted by Paul Songas View Post
Whoever deleted the rest of this thread PM me please.
Paul:

To answer your previous question, the chutes pulled the chassis apart because it was already broken. The chutes didn't break the chassis.

RG
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Old 09-24-2007, 01:01 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

Did John's car have the same information gathering system that Ashley's car has? If so, I hope the computer survived the crash so they can download and study the data. They'll probably know a lot more about what happened if they can. I'll reserve any judgment on how this happened until then.
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Old 09-24-2007, 01:06 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

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Originally Posted by Paul Songas View Post
Whoever deleted the rest of this thread PM me please.
Me too! I thought I was losing my memory prematurely?
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Old 09-24-2007, 03:22 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

I have a question,

Now when Force and the other teams changed their roll cage design, did they have new cars built in the process? Because is it not a fact that when you weld a new piece on to something that has been welded previously, wouldn't this make the chassis weak? I'm no expert on welding, but I figure it would make the frames weaker? I'm sure someone will get what I'm trying to say.

Mike
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Old 09-24-2007, 08:06 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

I think that John brought out a new chassis at the Norwalk event because the team thought the old chassis was the reason he was performing so inconsistently.
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Old 09-24-2007, 09:22 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

i wish someone could explain just how these cars are "designed to break apart"..... i have owned a few f/c's and to me a weld is a weld. there is no shear pins or aluminum bolts holding the chassis tubes together. i find it sort of rediculous for t.v. announcers to tell the general public "this is what is suposed to happen".
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Old 09-24-2007, 09:50 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

Randy,
as far as I know the only place where the heat treated tubing is used is in the engine bay of the top fuel cars although with the current lax standards of manufacture Murf may be having some of his other size tubing done as well.
AND for the umpteenth time the tubing is not heat treated to the point of excessive hardness. The current 4130 tubing is usually towards the bottom of the spec re tensile strength and the process used by McKinney simply elevates that tensile number to just above the top of the original range. This was originally done to make the difference between matching cars less so that they would be able to use the same tune-up.
That said, the area of the fractures is definitely a major concern. If the tire did in fact fail to initiate the incident it would appear that the harmonics induced the failure just as they trashed Hight's chassis at Reading.

Roo
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Old 09-24-2007, 10:24 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

I have owned both a TAD and TAFC (not at the same time), but over 25 years ago. I thought after Shirley's 1984 accident, that the "tub construction" (RE Indy Car) was incorperated into chassis where the driver compartments stayed in one piece. However I have noticed that even the Indy Car driver's compartment can be compromised in a wreck.
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Old 09-24-2007, 10:38 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

It appeared to me that the top-fuel cars had lots of tire chunking in the
shutdown area. You could actually see the chunks flying off of a number of cars.
(fuller and Dixon).

Could his tire of been chunking causing the chain reaction that occurred?
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Old 09-24-2007, 11:01 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

Quote:
Originally Posted by bruce mullins View Post
i wish someone could explain just how these cars are "designed to break apart"..... i have owned a few f/c's and to me a weld is a weld. there is no shear pins or aluminum bolts holding the chassis tubes together. i find it sort of rediculous for t.v. announcers to tell the general public "this is what is suposed to happen".
I hear ya' there, I have had more than casual contact with f/c's and I was never under that impression or told that.

If I had I might not have ever got in the damned thing

REX
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Old 09-24-2007, 11:29 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

Quote:
Originally Posted by David N Gawboy View Post
Did John's car have the same information gathering system that Ashley's car has? If so, I hope the computer survived the crash so they can download and study the data. They'll probably know a lot more about what happened if they can. I'll reserve any judgment on how this happened until then.
All of Force's car have the computers on board from Ford.....
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Old 09-24-2007, 11:32 AM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

I've owned several funny car frames and none of them had their first step down in tubing size until the tube was in front of the engine. All the chassis builders I talk to do not intentionally make weak points in the drivers area or anywhere else.

I remember seeing Del go off the end of the track and into the sand at Pomona a few years ago and go head over heals 2-3 times. The frame never broke in half. If they are supposed to break that certainly would have been enough energy to do it. But harmonic vibrations for less than a second from a blown tire shattering welded tubing in the drivers area? Heck, Bernstein's car hit the wall very hard after the front half of Force's car collected him. Although I'm sure it was bent Kenny was plenty able to safely drive it off the track. After the crash they were still able to tow Bernstein's car with a tow strap back to the pits and put it up in the air on the Pro Jacks to work on it.
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Old 09-24-2007, 12:50 PM
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Re: F/C chassis integrity

Didn't The Drivers Compartment Impact The Wall, And Fold Those Rails In Towards The Seat And John? I Am Not An Expert But That Part Slamming Into The Wall Could Have Broken Those Tubes Plus The Damage Done To John. If Indeed The Chassis Did Break Away At The Motor Plate The Damage Would Be Consistant With The Cockpit Hitting The Wall In A Forward Type Of Motion. Only Speculation And My 2 Cents.
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