Hendersonjk
New member
Just an idea but couldnt you turn two mower axles on thier backs with a driveshaft inbetween ( or shaft driven atv) mount a sideways motor and put a sprocket on the drive shaft that runs the length of the cart?
how bout 2 sprokets and two sets of chains; one for the front wheels, and one for the back? (I have no official mechanical background so keep the bashing to a minimal if its an outlandish idea)
Welcome! It's a fun site, feel free to poke around.joshpit2003 said:ok, so I happened to run into this forum durring a google search.
I'm planning on building something similar and thought I could share some of my concerns.

joshpit2003 said:firstly:
I have not yet determined whether a center diff is needed.
I DO know that in 4wd and awd vehicles the transfer case is typically an OPEN (or viscuous coupler) differential. Its for that reason they are "road safe" in 4wd and I believe it's because a t-case is LOCKED in Low-Range that they say NOT to drive on the roads in low range.
So... an open-diff t-case plays a role in drivability... how much of a role, I do not know. (all AWD vehicles that I know of have that open-diff t-case... take land cruisers for example... they have a "center diff" lock button in some models).
I spent $30 on a mopar 8.75 differential. And yes. It is most certainly overkill. I don't have a clue why I thought a mopar differential wouldn't be too big. I think I'm just going to have to bite the bullet and get that one from northern tool.joshpit2003 said:Secondly:
I believe putting car diffs into your go cart is complete over-kill. I've been searching the web for some smaller-scale diffs but cant seem to find much. my application only requires a 5 hp rated diff, but yours is closer to a quad ATV rating, so i would suggest you pull diffs off a quad.
joshpit2003 said:Thirdly:
You may want to increase your front wheel steering... it looks like with the frame hitting the tires you will only have a HUGE turning radius.
joshpit2003 said:ok, im gonna stop doing numbers now and just type:
I like your idea of using chains to power the front and rear axles, so i think it was a smart move to ditch the driveshafts.
my final suggestion would be to: JUST BUILD IT.
nothing will answer your questions better than a prototype.
i'm mainly saying this because it sounds like you want to build this thing cheap... so i'd suggest building it as cheap as possible and re-visit anything that doesnt work.
also:
you may want to build a scale model, heck just build it out of legos or something (i believe that they have differentials in some lego kits now). If you build yourself a scale model out of legos that could help to answer the center diff question.
if you can feel resistance turning the 2 diff. lego model and no resistance while turning the 3 diff. lego model then you know that a 3 diff. is necessary.
please keep us all posted on anything you do to test this. you've been doing a great job of keeping everyone up to date so far.
I cant wait to see this thing in the construction stage!
thanks.
-Josh!