Author Topic: Wheelie bars  (Read 17027 times)

Offline wideopen231

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #15 on: February 01, 2016, 05:19:24 AM »
The old saying"In the air for show,on the ground for dough".In the air 3 or 4" is fine if your heading straight.
Relecting obama is like shooting right foot because it did not hurt enough when you shot left foot

Offline masracingtd1167

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #16 on: February 01, 2016, 11:17:13 AM »
When I ran my short wheel base car in the 70's it needed a bar then and you should have one today . I bent plenty of stuff with that old car and chased a few photographers into the grass as well !

The wheelie bars in the bottom pic weren't effective?
     for that time that set of bars worked very well and I think for what you are doing something like that would work for you .

Offline George

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #17 on: February 01, 2016, 11:21:19 AM »
The bar doing it's job a few years ago with the injected setup.

Offline retroboy

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #18 on: February 22, 2016, 03:38:17 AM »
This what I used many many years ago. A pair of skate board wheels on cut down leaf springs with gas struts from a station wagon tail gate.  Clutch auto and it used to pull the front wheels into second.


Offline janjon

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #19 on: February 23, 2016, 07:07:01 PM »
"Long, stiff and low is best" . That's what she said. Well, two thirds of that, anyway... 3 or 4" is fine? Well she never said that...
Just keep the same amount of stuff on the right
as there is on the left. Seeing straight ahead is highly overrated....

Offline JrFuel Hayden

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #20 on: March 08, 2016, 09:51:58 PM »
I assume your short wheelie bar back "many many" years ago worked fine with the lower HP you were making and more important NO VHT, now you got bite and unless you carry 100-150 lbs of balast on your front axle, you will be sending me your front wheels to fix.

Jon, Hayden Wheels, 800-624-3803
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Offline retroboy

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #21 on: March 09, 2016, 02:12:50 AM »
I assume your short wheelie bar back "many many" years ago worked fine with the lower HP you were making and more important NO VHT, now you got bite and unless you carry 100-150 lbs of balast on your front axle, you will be sending me your front wheels to fix.

Jon, Hayden Wheels, 800-624-3803

It ran mid 9's. 302 Ford flat tappet camshaft and 750 DP Holley on straight pump gas. Yep no track prep back then, Water burn out, VHT out of the bottle in front of the tyres burn out, then a little chirp, then go.  Funny you should mention the wheels because you've reminded me they seemed to have lost their roundness. LOL


Offline JrFuel Hayden

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #22 on: March 19, 2016, 10:46:20 PM »
RetroBoy it seems you want your dragster to look like the dragsters "back-in-the-day" like the photos you mention of the old 3 point roll bars. Those cars didn't have the traction we have now with VHT, and softer tires, and back then we just smoked the tires to keep the motor in the RPM range where it's making good power. Now we try to keep the RPM where we want it thru our converters or slipper clutch. If you really want the "no wheelie bar" look, then you could do what one of our Heritage Jrfuelers did at this years March Meet, no wheelie bar at all BUT he added 80 lbs of ballast to his front end. Now I would suggest if you are going to try that you should run a wheelie bar until you figure out how much weight you to have to add to keep from bending your front wheels. Another good idea is to lift up your front end until your wheelie bar hits so you can tell how high your front end will come up before it hits the bar. One of the problems with setting the bar too high is the front end will climb fast and "HIT" the bar hard and unload your slicks. most racers don't want to run an extra 100-150 lbs on their car so they run a long [ 5-6'] single wheel bar that is somewhat flexable, set low, like about 2" off the track so that it will just flex and force the front end down and not hit the bar hard at the hit. If you run a powerglide and have a problem with wheelies, you may have too tight of a converter. 

Have Fun,
Jon
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Offline gregm784

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #23 on: April 12, 2016, 08:49:30 PM »
We run our bar about 2" off the ground.  Here's a 'normal' leave.

Greg
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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #24 on: July 06, 2016, 05:02:53 AM »
This what I used many many years ago. A pair of skate board wheels on cut down leaf springs with gas struts from a station wagon tail gate.  Clutch auto and it used to pull the front wheels into second.



 Retro Boy, cool, would love to see a nice close up of your setup.
   The station wagon struts didn't compress to quick?

Offline retroboy

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #25 on: July 06, 2016, 05:20:26 AM »
This was a long long time ago Ponti - not a camera to be seen. No they worked fine.
 Is yours the car being built in the little shed in England ? Nice if it's the one I'm thinking of.
Cheers


Ponti

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #26 on: July 06, 2016, 09:02:54 AM »
This was a long long time ago Ponti - not a camera to be seen. No they worked fine.
 Is yours the car being built in the little shed in England ? Nice if it's the one I'm thinking of.
Cheers

 Ok, I liked the idea of being able to have a mini bar and still have a push bar, for starts.  Mine frame was built in a shed out in the middle of fields over here, it is now in my garage.  Car was built for my garage so fits with a couple of inches either end, lol.

 Not sure if you have seen the thread on the build,
  http://www.frontenginedragsters.org/forum/index.php/topic,1681.0.html

Offline retroboy

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Re: Wheelie bars
« Reply #27 on: July 07, 2016, 04:24:50 AM »
That's it - I like it a lot.
Cheers