Quote Originally Posted by only1moreracecaripromiss View Post
Logan, I see that you have the nose dive planes on your list like the Snap On build. Can you tell me where you sourced these as I can't find them on FFR parts list.
Firstly, congrats on joining the forum and ordering your kit! You used your first post on this forum in my build thread... I am honored. Lol

To your question, the canards (dive planes) are available from FFR. You can call and ask for them, made in their composites shop. A word of warning though, they're not the quality you might expect of a high-end carbon fiber race part from someone like Anderson Composites, APR, Seibon, Speedkore, etc. They're raw carbon straight out of the mold, weave imperfections and fringed edges included. They are NOT clear coated and pretty like what you see on the Snap On car. So expect to do plenty of body work on them (and any other composites received from FFR, the main body included) if you wish to go that way. Had I known, I would have simply made my own. They are not overly difficult shapes even for a beginner.

Quote Originally Posted by Rsnake View Post
Logan, Did you get your wheels ordered yet?
Rsnake, I planned to order wheels during Black Friday sales of 2020.... but things were/are tight so didn't place the order. Thank goodness too! Forgestar just released a new wheel profile for the F14 which I will be going with. I was already expecting to be on the extreme end of their available offset on the SDC (Super Deep Concave) wheels, but they have now released a profile called UDC (Ultra Deep Concave) that is available in negative offsets....finally! I will still wait until I put the body on my car to measure for exact fitment. Should be ordering them sometime this Spring though.


Now, update time.

My daily driver 2017 Mustang GT Premium w/ Performance Pack has been a GREAT car, but I knew all along it would be replaced with a truck so I can haul the FFR as needed. So the day after Christmas I drove the Mustang up to Tennessee and traded it in for a 2021 Ram 1500 Big Horn Level 2 Night Edition. Cross the tow vehicle off the list! Now I need a trailer... considering building my own from scratch with a lowering deck that requires no ramps (yes I have a problem).





On the FFR Daytona front....the video a few posts back left out some detail. I had fabricated a bead-forming tool and used it to great success on my aluminum upper radiator tube. Then, ordered the Boig lower aluminum tube after trying half a dozen ways of routing the rubber hoses, with and without a spring inside which tries but doesn't always prevent hose collapse. Plus the amount of hose sticking into the wheel well was too much for comfort, especially considering the amount of wheel and tire I have to stuff in there. Highly recommend the Boig cool tube... nice product and fits perfectly. Filled the Gen3 Coyote with Motorcraft coolant and purged air through the Moroso tank. Just like an OEM Mustang setup, couldn't be simpler. Ran the car for 30 minutes going through multiple radiator fan cycles. All systems looked good. Since then, I have been driving the car here and there. Put about 30 (loud) miles on so far, and need about 100 miles on the clutch for break-in before I can race it. Between this and the tune status, it's the reason I didn't get to race it in 2020. So close!!



During the 30 miles worth of driving, a clunking noise was identified. Turned out to be the bearings I installed in the control arms, one per arm was backwards, so the longitudinal loading caused the retaining rings inside to be forced from their groove, and the captive spherical bearing to move within the shell. Unfortunately, they are easy to press in, but there are no fixturable points with which to press them back out, so I had to weld a tab onto each end to press the incorrectly oriented bearings out and press them in from the other side. As a note, to anyone using bearings in place of the polyurethane bushings... press them all in from the OUTSIDE of the arms, facing in. I had pressed mine all from the same side (from the rear, in my case, all pointing forward). They are all replaced now and solid as a rock, no clunk. Glad to catch that in a test drive before reaching max lateral loading of the chassis mid-corner at an autocross!



I have also been working on seats and harnesses. Believe it or not, this has been one of the hardest parts of my build. Placement, alignment, getting the 6-point harnesses to work with the Kirkeys, sliders for the drivers seat, height with my helmet on, centered to the steering wheel, seat back braces, seat heaters, added side foam (I'm as small as a jockey), and more.... it's been quite the debacle. Getting to a point where they'll work now I hope. Welded some brackets to the bottom of the chassis for the sub straps to bolt into, behind the seat as intended by all racing sanctions.

I also got the last of the exhaust components I spoke about in the previous update, the laser cut flanges. I only needed two, but ended up getting 8 total; 6 plasma cut from stainless steel, and 2 laser cut from mild steel. Once the body is on my chassis, I will fab the custom pipes and hopefully quiet it down some.... many racing organizations have strict noise limits.



Now, I just need to find time to keep working on it! I'm schooling for Mechanical Engineering on the side, and these courses are not easy... I spend more hours sitting at the computer than I get in the garage. Not an excuse, just a factor. I bought HP Tuners MPVI2 and am sort of learning to tune on the side, with help of course... but that's a whole lot of time I don't have right now, so considering calling in some professional help to jump start the process. Lots of other little details over the past few months, but this covers the highlights.