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Skid plate for S2K


Mondo

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After grinding my oil pan down once and seeing Kevin do the same at Buttonwillow I had a skid plate made up. Quarter inch aluminum plate.. only lost about 1/2in of clearance. I do have to undo 6 bolts to change the oil (small price for piece of mind).

 

http://www.usa7s.com/aspnetforum/upload/1947019395_Lotus shock bracket 003.jpg

 

http://www.usa7s.com/aspnetforum/upload/1036560826_IMG_2173.JPG

 

http://www.usa7s.com/aspnetforum/upload/1422298942_IMG_2172.JPG

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I do have to undo 6 bolts to change the oil (small price for piece of mind).

 

I had to do the same thing with the skid plate and got annoyed with that after a while. It is O.K. when new but a mess when the bolts get dirty and full of oily goop. Therefore I tapped the drain plug with a hose barb nipple and extended that with maybe 9" long piece of 1/2" dia. hose. For an oil change I just need to drop the hose into the catch pan and open the (secured) end stopper cap. However, the oil needs to be warm or the draining takes very long. I also jack up the car on the opposite side to make sure everything comes out.

 

Gert

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Good Job, I like it.

 

If all goes well I am going to get rid of the oil pan all together and go dry sump.

If I wasnt I would be doing exactly what you are doing.

 

Cheers

7evin

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Good Job, I like it.

 

If all goes well I am going to get rid of the oil pan all together and go dry sump.

If I wasnt I would be doing exactly what you are doing.

 

Cheers

7evin

 

My priority is dependability. Dry sump is good but another unit to worry & to breakdown. Make it simple "stupid" approach.

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I tried a thin skip plate , just to prevent sanding away the bottom of the pan, but I backed over something that caught it, and I had to remove it. After seeing Mondo's skid plate, I may try something like that.

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For those with dry sumps, ground clearance is not quite as critical, but some protection is still good peace of mind.

 

Caterham offers a sort of impact bar of steel that bolts to two threaded sockets in the front of the Cosworth/Duratec dry sump pan.

 

It fits like a charm. We'll see if it does its job....

DSC_0001.jpg

DSC_0002.jpg

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This is the front end of my well-worn sump guard (after 3 years). And yes, I do have occasional ground contact.....it is a tad on the heavy side (steel) but except for the front impact armor thinner than most aluminum skid plates (only 1/16"). It has saved my butt (i.e. the sump) a few times. Not exactly elegant (I am a lousy welder) but very functional. The local mountain roads are strewn with crumbly rocks, especially in Winter.

http://www.usa7s.com/vb/attachment.php?attachmentid=21&stc=1&d=1236134002

 

Gert

SumpGuard3Years.jpg

Edited by slomove
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How come you guys don't just bond the skid plate to the oil pan?

 

In the offroad world, many people just weld a piece of 3/16" plate to the bottom of the oil pan to distribute point load impacts.

 

Seems like where abrasion is the main concern, simply bonding or welding a piece of plate to the bottom would be sufficient and maximize ground clearance.

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It takes more than gooping up a sheet of aluminum and slapping it on due to the finned oil pan (see the pics of what it took) .

In the foothills around here it's not unusual to have little rock slides and have rocks around the size of your fist, or bigger, in the roadway as you come around the bend. I wanted to deflect those too.

I guess I could of cut the bottom of my oilpan out and bonded a plate that had a 45 degree angle in front of the oil pan.... seems more work than what I had done.

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How come you guys don't just bond the skid plate to the oil pan?

 

In the offroad world, many people just weld a piece of 3/16" plate to the bottom of the oil pan to distribute point load impacts.

 

Seems like where abrasion is the main concern, simply bonding or welding a piece of plate to the bottom would be sufficient and maximize ground clearance.

 

I would not like th engine and mounts to take the blows of big rocks, whereas the skid pan directs those forces to the frame, not the engine.

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