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Old Apr 27, 2007 | 12:22 PM
  #71  
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It rains a lot here, it's raining right now. I have no sound deadening, you'll see when you see the final pics. I'm undecided on the trunk right now.
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Old Apr 27, 2007 | 01:03 PM
  #72  
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then damn you have a lot more cage than me. evap and trunk are -maybe- 15lbs.
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Old Apr 30, 2007 | 06:24 PM
  #73  
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Originally Posted by cthree,Apr 11 2007, 02:37 AM
Why did they do this strange triangle design in the upper windshield corners?!
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Old Apr 30, 2007 | 07:09 PM
  #74  
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It's stronger than a T. I'm not a structural engineer so can't offer any better explanation. Perhaps twohoos or mikegarrison will chime in.
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Old Apr 30, 2007 | 07:25 PM
  #75  
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twohoos is an engineer? All these years I just thought he was really smart and encyclopedic.
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Old Apr 30, 2007 | 07:33 PM
  #76  
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He's not an engineer. He just plays one on the Interweb.
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Old Apr 30, 2007 | 07:36 PM
  #77  
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Originally Posted by cthree,Apr 30 2007, 08:09 PM
It's stronger than a T. I'm not a structural engineer so can't offer any better explanation. Perhaps twohoos or mikegarrison will chime in.
No time to refresh my memory on trusses, but you have to consider the angles involved as well as the fact that you have multiple paths to distribute the load instead of just one.
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Old May 1, 2007 | 07:04 AM
  #78  
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Originally Posted by stocky,Apr 30 2007, 06:24 PM
Why did they do this strange triangle design in the upper windshield corners?!
The simple answer to me is because of the bracing at the rear of the passenger and driver side windows. Notice earlier in this thread it is explained that that bracing has to be there (versus sticking further out) because that is where the wings on the seat are and any further would inhibit egress.

Therefore the triangle at the front makes sure that the part of that bar that connects to the top of the cage connects at a node instead of just in the middle of the bar. With out the node, any force directed along the first bar would create a bending moment in the top bar. With the node, the bending moment is countered when you put the bar from the triangle into tension.
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Old May 1, 2007 | 07:14 AM
  #79  
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To me, cthree's cage looks like an extension of a geodesic dome, modified to fit into a non-spherical space.



A geodesic dome is an almost spherical structure based on a network of struts arranged on great circles (geodesics) lying approximately on the surface of a sphere. The geodesics intersect to form triangular elements that have local triangular rigidity and yet also distribute the stress across the entire structure. It is the only man-made structure that gets proportionally stronger as it increases in size. When completed to form a full sphere, it is known as a geodesic sphere. Of all known structures made from linear elements, a geodesic dome has the highest ratio of enclosed volume to weight. Geodesic domes are far stronger as complete units than the individual struts would suggest. It is common for a new dome to reach a "critical mass" during construction, shift slightly, and lift any attached scaffolding from the ground.
- Wikipedia
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