Sunday, 29 April 2018

Off Road Go-Kart

And for my next trick.....

I'm going to build an off-road go-kart. I started with the small bits. These are the bearing the rear axle will run in. The idea is that they'll be attached to the angle steel, which will provide a surface to attach to the chassis rails. The chassis will have two  rails for strength and safety, so these will fit between them.



I've got one of those Rage Evolution saws that cuts metal. It doesn't spark, but it does fling chips. Best to be wearing googles and ear defenders.




Clamping and marking up for the holes. It's quite important that this is right, and that the two axle bearers are the same, because it's this that's defining how far apart the rails are, and it's preferable for that to be the same both sides. Turns out to be 118mm as the distance. I am kind of making this up as I go along....


That's them both made. Time to mock it up a bit and see....



The front is important, because obviously the front wheels need to turn side to side to steer. So the chassis has to be narrower here than the rear, but the front wheels need to stick out about the same as the rear, or at least the same or narrower. Looks weird with a wider front track to rear.



Here I've clamped the axles bearers to the bench. The bench is 900mm wide, which is what I'm going to make the go-kart frame. It might be wider than ideal, but what the heck.


Here I've cut the two chassis rails and set them parallel to each other and clamped them. The brace beetween them is held by welding magnets. These hold steel at various angles, most commonly 90deg.



Here's as far as I got today. I've welded up a few of the ladder cross braces, and added some triangulation to stop lozenging. You can see the rail is cut at an angle (see, just behind the wheel), that's to bring the frame in for the steering.


And mocked up once more. I think it's too long in the rear. But we'll see. If I end up having to cut bits out I've already done, it will be a bit of a blow, but these are the breaks - I've not done this before.

I really need to do the front to see where everything will end up. I think it's best to work from the front backwards, but of course I didn't. I'll probably change tack now....

Really, for much more progress, I need my lathe back in action, but I can keep on with the frame a bit more.

If you like lathes, mine's here. Our last house had 3 phase electricity. This one doesn't. So I need an inverter, and some time to mess about with getting the motor out of my lathe. Not looking forward to that - it weighs about 600kg, and is against a wall. And the motor's at floor level, by the wall. Fun.

Zip Wire

With the kids getting bigger, I thought they might like a zip wire. We're fortunate enough to have a part of the garden that has a few trees off to the side of the main grass area, so I selected a large willow tree and off we went:


This is the tower for launch...


And up..

And up some more...



Needed to get an arch together so that it would do for  the landing zone....


This is about as far as the tower got...


But we got the cable up


And figured out a retrieval system so that you could wind the trolley  and seat arrangement back once you'd slid down...


Unfortunately, our neighbours, who'd not noticed all the building of zip wires apparently up to this point suddenly did. And decided they didn't like the look of the tower. You could see into their garden from the top of it, so that wasn't ideal. Long story short, the lot had to come down.

So part deux, more holes, more concrete, more cable, more digger hire, more timber, more rope. It's bloody expensive the first time, and although not quite double to do it twice, it wasn't far off. That'll teach me I suppose.

Make some foundations, get the tower partially broken down, and get a digger:


That tower weighs an awful lot. Tipped the digger aa couple of times. 3.5 tonne digger. And that's only the bottom and next floor


Then we had to put the top floor back on. Because I'd needed to take a chainsaw to the tower to get it to pieces, it took a fair bit of rebuilding to get it back to being one tower again.




Then it needed a sort of outrigger for the launch platform because the branch we were using for the line didn't go over the platform properly. I don't like heights, so bit of squeaky bum time building that. There are two removable planks so you can get the zip wire seat up there.



You can get something of an idea of the scale of it from this pic. The arch for the landing zone has now been moved, is facing the other way, and a new cable is back up.



You can see the attachment of the cable in this shot - heavy duty turnbuckle too. Not sure what the breaking strain of the cable is - it's about 9.5kN I think. Plenty in  any case. - 12mm steel cable.


Anyway, in action, it looks like this (the orange lines are to retrieve the zip line post slide):


I was in my best clothes for this one....