Intro
hi there, my name's Angus, and I'm new to this forum. I'm a second-year engineering student in Canberra, Australia. I joined because I'm planning on building myself a road kart in the upcoming uni holidays, and I need some advice.
The kart is not intended to be a competition racing kart, just something that handles well and goes fast. I'm building it to get some practical experience with making things rather than just designing.
The Kart
I'm copying the frame design of a production 125cc shifter-kart frame, namely the Tecno SS30. I'll be making the frame myself out of mild steel.
(Available here: http://www.tecnokart.com/tecno3/chassis_ss30_ss32_ing.html )
I'm going to buy a 250cc twin from my local bike wreckers. The power output of these engines is roughly 35hp when new, but the power I get might be lower than that because the engine will be older.
For the wheels, tyres, bearings, axle etc I'm probably going to end up buying proper racing kart bits.
My Questions
I'm planning on making the frame out of 30mm outside diameter steel tubing. How thick do the walls need to be?
Where the production frame is bent, could I cut those sections and weld them at an angle instead? Would this affect the handling, and if so, how?
Axles are bloody expensive. Can I just buy a 50mm tube from a local metal shop and use that instead? (What wall thickness would I need?)
Do motorbikes and karts use chains with the same distance between the teeth? Is there anything to stop me using a rear sprocket designed for karts with a motorbike chain and front sprocket?
What are typical camber and caster angles for 125cc shifter karts? I don't want to make mine adjustable, because it's too complicated. So I need to get it right first go.
Do I really need front brakes? They look like they'll complicate things enormously and be fairly expensive. Will going without front brakes make my kart just slower stopping, or will it actually be incredibly dangerous? (Bear in mind that I could be going up to 150km/h or 90m/h.) I'm happy to have the braking performance of a regular large sedan rather than a super-fast open-wheel racing car.
Do motorbike sprockets and brake discs use the same mounting geometry as kart sprockets and discs? If I buy motorbike sprockets and discs, will the bolt-holes in them line up with the bolt-holes in a 50mm-axle shifter-kart sprocket carrier?
Should I be putting seat-belts on this thing? From what I can tell, no racing karts have belts, at all. I find this very, very strange. Is it actually safer without belts somehow?
I'm sure half of what I've asked is stupid noob-questions, so please bear with me. Thanks in advance for any help or advice.
Angus
hi there, my name's Angus, and I'm new to this forum. I'm a second-year engineering student in Canberra, Australia. I joined because I'm planning on building myself a road kart in the upcoming uni holidays, and I need some advice.
The kart is not intended to be a competition racing kart, just something that handles well and goes fast. I'm building it to get some practical experience with making things rather than just designing.
The Kart
I'm copying the frame design of a production 125cc shifter-kart frame, namely the Tecno SS30. I'll be making the frame myself out of mild steel.
(Available here: http://www.tecnokart.com/tecno3/chassis_ss30_ss32_ing.html )
I'm going to buy a 250cc twin from my local bike wreckers. The power output of these engines is roughly 35hp when new, but the power I get might be lower than that because the engine will be older.
For the wheels, tyres, bearings, axle etc I'm probably going to end up buying proper racing kart bits.
My Questions
I'm planning on making the frame out of 30mm outside diameter steel tubing. How thick do the walls need to be?
Where the production frame is bent, could I cut those sections and weld them at an angle instead? Would this affect the handling, and if so, how?
Axles are bloody expensive. Can I just buy a 50mm tube from a local metal shop and use that instead? (What wall thickness would I need?)
Do motorbikes and karts use chains with the same distance between the teeth? Is there anything to stop me using a rear sprocket designed for karts with a motorbike chain and front sprocket?
What are typical camber and caster angles for 125cc shifter karts? I don't want to make mine adjustable, because it's too complicated. So I need to get it right first go.
Do I really need front brakes? They look like they'll complicate things enormously and be fairly expensive. Will going without front brakes make my kart just slower stopping, or will it actually be incredibly dangerous? (Bear in mind that I could be going up to 150km/h or 90m/h.) I'm happy to have the braking performance of a regular large sedan rather than a super-fast open-wheel racing car.
Do motorbike sprockets and brake discs use the same mounting geometry as kart sprockets and discs? If I buy motorbike sprockets and discs, will the bolt-holes in them line up with the bolt-holes in a 50mm-axle shifter-kart sprocket carrier?
Should I be putting seat-belts on this thing? From what I can tell, no racing karts have belts, at all. I find this very, very strange. Is it actually safer without belts somehow?
I'm sure half of what I've asked is stupid noob-questions, so please bear with me. Thanks in advance for any help or advice.
Angus