S
sschering
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OK Nobody has bothered to ask so I have to..
What welding process and equipment did you use to make the swinger?
What welding process and equipment did you use to make the swinger?
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Having no idea how to fab anything and not building anything more complicated that Chef's wheel barrel frame...IF the welds hold and a good brace is added at the pivot point, that swing arm is just fine.
As far as the "drag race only" application, have you ever seen the torsional flex that drag machine (bike, car, or truck) goes through when the clutch is dumped? Ever sat in the seat and had "seat of the pants" experience of that force? Ever had to refab a "factory designed/built vehicle" for race applications because it was either too light or poorly designed when the hammer is thrown?
1/4" wall thickness over the 18"-24" swing arm that Nasty put together is OVERKILL to say the least. Because there will be little if any flex in the material that you used, the welds are the critical link here. Braced correctly, welded correctly, it would be the only part to survive a pile-up at any speed, and come out straight.
Nasty...I feel for you. It can be rough throwing "your work" out on a fourm. Those who know will offer good design suggestions and help where they can. Those who don't will criticize and slam you, for lack of real world experience and next to no fab knowledge. No one here has calculated all the factors that are going to apply to that particular swingarm and unless there is a full table of the #'s before those that are throwing stones and they can read the numbers and do the math...it is all speculation.
Make sure the welds have penetrated all the way through (a bevel on the materials to be joined works very well and two to three passes may be needed depending on the welder-wire-rod -flux and heat being used) and a good gusset brace at the pivot and ride it.
Start slow and use a laquer based primer (it will crack not flex if there is stress movement) over the welds instead of paint and watch them closely and you'll be fine.
Those of you who criticized my idea shame on you..... I just wanted constructive criticism on what I have done.
By the way you guys... who designs those 4" GSXR extensions? How do you know the engineering is sound? How do you know they don't place stress on the stock swingarm that it's not engineered to cope with?
Just playing devils advocate. As with a lot of this stuff I suspect someone took an educated guess, did it & tested it but certainly buying off Ebay it would be good to be sure...![]()
Go back to kindergarten, you say. How about you stay out of this thread if you're going to be a jerk.
Nasty
Thanks for saying this Dan, I was thinking the same thing. Another thing, aluminum is usually heat treated after welding; different alloys require different HT’ing techniques. Taking an existing Al part and tacking on extra pieces like these extensions anneals the metal in the heat affected zone and makes it weak. Most likely this reduction in strength is not a deal breaker though. Just trying to make a point to those advocating this method vs. building your own steel swingarm.
The GSXR swingarm extensions are bolt-on, no welding required.![]()
Oh no the welding alone is enough to alter the properties of the swingarm, steel or aluminum, enough to cripple the area where they were installed. Thats where having a welder who understands this comes into play. Too much heat and you loss the tempering, too little and you dont ensure a joint between the pieces that will hold up. Not knowing how these extensions install and ride on the swingarm, I couldnt begin to venture a guess as to how they would effect the swinger they are attached to.Okay I misunderstood. The shock mounts need to be welded though right? Guess that's not enough to matter.![]()
Not really. The first thing that will be noticed (least we hope it would get seen) would be stress cracks. And just as in glass, a stress crack can and will run with the grain of the metal. Vibrations will increase the amount of stress making the area even worse in a short period of time.The stress in the swingarm is lower out near the axle where the welding is needed, so even if the metal looses some strength it may still be okay...maybe...not sure.