Subaru Conversion, CSOB style... |
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Subaru Conversion, CSOB style... |
jsteele22 |
Oct 4 2005, 03:43 PM
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#1
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 727 Joined: 24-August 05 From: Colorado Springs, CO Member No.: 4,653 |
I've been thinking about what it would take to do a Subaru install into my 914, and making it as inexpensive (and as home-brew) as possible. I have a friend who is a machinist with a lot of enthusiasm for the project, and a nice shop. He's done a couple of adapter plates before, so I'm confident in that part. What I'm more curious about is the flywheel. My idea for this is to take the stock Subaru flywheel and machine it down to a radius of 4-5-ish inches, and then bolt a stock Porsche (okay, VW) flywheel to it. So the Subaru FW becomes just an adapter hub. Then, the thickness of the adapter plate is chosen to get the input shaft to reach the proper position in the friction plate/pilot bearing. What do all you hybrid gurus out there think of this ? Am I overlooking anything glaringly obvious ? (I haven't seen the pieces in person, just in Haynes & on EBay.) Sure, the assembly will have to be balanced carefully, but I think we (he) can handle that. The engine I'm looking at is an EJ25 (165-ish HP) or, more realistically, an EJ22 (130-ish), so it won't be an axle-snapper like some of you SBC folks are driving. Another issue is the engine mount. I've seen pics of Scott's, and another one (tube steel) that I think Friid had made up, but not the ultra-secret Renegade design. One idea I had on this is to not use the stock Suby engine mount points, but instead make the adapter plate several inches wider than the bell housing. Then each side of the adapter plate could have an "L" shaped bracket bolted (sideways) onto it; the bottom of the L would bolt vertically onto the plate at two points, and the back of the L would point (horizontally) forward to hang from a cross bar, either in the conventional (lower) position, or up high across the top of the engine bay. This would take essentially all of the torque off of the mounting bar bolts, and would leave an open path for the shift linkage. In practice, I'm sure there would need to be a little cross-bracing to prevent side-to-side motion, and also to keep the L from straightening. Again, oh learned ones, what are your opinions on this setup ? I *think* that suspending an engine from the adapter plate is essentially what all the Subaru airplane folks do. I'm really pretty excited about the idea of putting a Suby in my car. And it would be even more cool if it turns out to be affordable. Please let me know what you think.... |
Brian Mifsud |
Oct 4 2005, 04:30 PM
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#2
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Mechanical Engineer Group: Members Posts: 981 Joined: 3-March 03 From: Penngrove, CA Member No.: 384 Region Association: None |
Maching the suby plate down to make it an adapter plate isn't an awful idea in my book.
It solves the problem of how to make up the difference between 901 bellhousing and suby bellhousing. Of course the assembly should be carefully balanced after it is bolted together. Note that the bolts used to bring 901 Flywheel and Suby flywheel together are going to have a stronger influence on imbalance since they are going to situated OUTSIDE (radially) of the suby-to-crankshaft bolts. Of course, getting clearance for the friction plate needs to be considered in picking where they end up. Make sure its very well balanced, and use locktite on the bolts. Make sure they are torqued to spec. Don't want all those parts flying apart. Wouldn't hurt for your machinist friend to put locating pins and holes between the two plates, keyed so you can't assemble them in the wrong orientation (as the clock turns).... Let us know how it works out. |
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