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Kirkham Motorsports

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Old 12-04-2006, 12:17 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by David Kirkham
No,

I am not that good of a driver! Maybe Morris, or Mario Andretti could tell.

David

I guess what I was trying to get at is when moving from one surface to another at a different angle, let's say a steep driveway, where you come in at a 45 degree angle to be sure that you won't scrape the front, so one wheel hits at a time. As the front wheel climbs the driveway, and the opposite side rear wheel is still on flat pavement, could you feel a difference in the frame torsion between the stainless and the steel?

I had a friend that I used to visit with a couple different Corvettes with a real steep driveway as described above. I remember that with my 1993 Vette, it was like jello, you felt the car's structure completely twist as it flexed going up that driveway, while the 2004 Z06 I had later would feel like it was carved from a chunk of steel. I think it would have picked up a wheel off the ground before it gave in this stress. The difference between these two generations of vettes is significant. . .

Furthermore, I assume the stainless is thinner than the steel in order to be lighter, since I believe SS is stronger than steel, is this assumption correct?

Last edited by rsimoes; 12-04-2006 at 12:24 PM..
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Old 12-04-2006, 01:00 PM
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"I assume the stainless is thinner than the steel in order to be lighter, since I believe SS is stronger than steel, is this assumption correct?"



There are only about a billion variations, which one were you referring to?

The addition of atoms to combat corrosion typically does NOT improve strength, but it does corrode less.

I would happily yield to a metallurgist, but I believe (as opposed to know or think) that stainless alloys are softer and less strong depending on how and what you measure. But they can be specified to be strong enough for a given application.

It does not rust (not technically true, but practically so) and it looks great. Kinda what ERA said. I best get out of here before an SPF'er gets 'whooped' up on. ;-) Those ERAs look mighty fine.

Ciao,
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