I dont mean buy theirs, but replicate and improve or change to your specs.
Really appreciate your thoughts, and I agree with you on the "see what's out there and what makes sense and make your own version" train of thought. There are some really nice ready-to-roll frames out there - Art Morrison, Roadster Shop, Schwartz Performance - and they are all 15K-20K, which is more than I want to drop at a single moment; one more reason to build it myself one piece at a time, spreading that cost over several months.
On the front halo bar delete - I'm onboard as long as I can achieve my goal of significantly improved beam strength. Looking at the cage in Chris Alston's G-Chassis, I don't mind a halo bar and down bars, as long as they are tucked up very close to the A pillars and tied in with a plate since no trim would every fit in that narrow space:
Here's the chassis that really lit the bulb for me, and a general design I'd like to follow:
Everything is 10ga steel. Rockers are enlarged, and the torque box connectors are exaggerated versions of the factory Hemi/6-pack versions. This lightens the load on any subframe connector and allows a normal floor profile. Art Morrison uses vertical 2x3 for the inner floor structure, but has smaller front and rear torque boxes.
With a few twists and turns aside, I'm thinking these are the next few steps to the build while on the body cart:
- Get body perfectly level and off the casters - all work done in a fixed position
- Measure deflection
- Reinforce the box shape of the body with a bunch of temporary 1" square tube
- Cut out the main floor from the firewall just below the wiper motor to the footwell of the back seats
- Reinforce the exposed frame stubs to the temporary tube structure, remove the torsion bar crossmember
- Build and install new rocker and torque box structure, tying into frame stubs
- Plate the factory frame stubs with 14ga steel (like the unibody XJ folks) - brings the average thickness of the frame to 10ga
- Build out the inner frame structure and floor supports from the rockers
- Remove inner box structure reinforcements
- Measure deflection
if required
- Build 6 point cage
- Measure deflection
- Add halo bar, a-pillar down bars, front suspension down bars
- Measure defelction
From there, I figure to start the general process of fitting the powertrain, hang the front and rear suspensions, and fabricate the firewall, tubs, and floor.
I read this article in Hot Rod Magazine and thought it could inspire:
http://www.hotrod.com/articles/one-car-garage-wonder/
You're thinking exactly the same way I am. Lots of patience, nights and weekends, friends and a few beers. I'm not setting any timeline goals at this point, but I do look forward to a progress-filled Texas winter.
David