Diff Stiffening Bracket - Extra Strong Design
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I cant lay claim to this design, it was fabricated by the previous
blokes who owned my S2 elan. At that stage of it's life it
was raced all over the country side here in OZ.
Considering that the normal Diff stiffening brackets are simply
a piece of heavy gauge angle with a couple of bolt holes
drilled for the upper mount bolts. I note that some owners say
they can be a pain in the ass to assemble while removing/ installing the
Diff in the chassis, this design is neat because it becomes part of the Diff
and makes the installation a breeze.
As you will note, much of the strength comes from the front plate
which is secured by the four upper studs on the Diff housing, as
well as the way the bracket wraps alloy housing ears, the bracket has
been on the car before it came into my ownership in 1981.
During the refurbishment, a small amount of welding was required
on a weld seam that had cracked on the left side of the bracket, not
bad for being service for probably more than thirty years.
The Diff shown here is a 3.9, I also have a 3.55, and a 4.1, the mounting
flanges on all of the Diffs (Sourced from various Escorts) have been
modified to fit straight onto the elan prop shaft. the gearbox
ratios are of the ultra close variety, first gear is pretty tall when
running the 3.55.
If you like fabricating with sheet metal, you might like to make this
a project sometime, the measurements etc can be taken directly
from the Diff, but like all small sheet metal projects, it is best to
create cardboard template patterns first, and create your project
from that.
Have fun
Ceejay.
blokes who owned my S2 elan. At that stage of it's life it
was raced all over the country side here in OZ.
Considering that the normal Diff stiffening brackets are simply
a piece of heavy gauge angle with a couple of bolt holes
drilled for the upper mount bolts. I note that some owners say
they can be a pain in the ass to assemble while removing/ installing the
Diff in the chassis, this design is neat because it becomes part of the Diff
and makes the installation a breeze.
As you will note, much of the strength comes from the front plate
which is secured by the four upper studs on the Diff housing, as
well as the way the bracket wraps alloy housing ears, the bracket has
been on the car before it came into my ownership in 1981.
During the refurbishment, a small amount of welding was required
on a weld seam that had cracked on the left side of the bracket, not
bad for being service for probably more than thirty years.
The Diff shown here is a 3.9, I also have a 3.55, and a 4.1, the mounting
flanges on all of the Diffs (Sourced from various Escorts) have been
modified to fit straight onto the elan prop shaft. the gearbox
ratios are of the ultra close variety, first gear is pretty tall when
running the 3.55.
If you like fabricating with sheet metal, you might like to make this
a project sometime, the measurements etc can be taken directly
from the Diff, but like all small sheet metal projects, it is best to
create cardboard template patterns first, and create your project
from that.
Have fun
Ceejay.
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- ceejay
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Yes.........all very well CJ, but beyond the abilities of most Elan owners I suspect, including me. I shall stick with my Lotus made bit of right angle and the much stronger, later type diff housing. The angle is not so difficult to fit, just a bit of juggling and a good dollop of silicon around the bolt to stop any leaks from that area, on a rebuilt clean diff anyway! Simples.
Leslie
Leslie
- 512BB
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ceejay wrote: <snip> I cant lay claim to this design, it was fabricated by the previous blokes who owned my S2 elan. At that stage of it's life it was raced all over the country side here in OZ...the bracket has been on the car before it came into my ownership in 1981.
Have fun Ceejay.
Hi Ceejay,
It would be good to know the context of this...i.e. was it a direct solution to probs found when racing...or was it AFTER having experience with the standard stiffening bracket...and what power/torque was the motor putting out...
Cheers - Richard
- ardee_selby
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Richard.
As I said in the original posting, it was on the car when I bought it, the elan at
the time was powered/raced with a Brian Hart all steel motor with an output way
up there (I don't know the output figures as it was too long ago).
As to why the bracket was used, I guess it was standard practice among the guys
racing elans at that time (1970's-early 80's). the known problems of the early alloy
diff housings were more than likely the reason for the bracket being designed and
built as shown.
A rather clever modular design I would say, and not all that difficult to fabricate,
I'm glad it was left on the car.... pity I did not also grab the Hart engine as well the
quaife Diff.... oh well, ya can't win'em all I guess.
As I said in the original posting, it was on the car when I bought it, the elan at
the time was powered/raced with a Brian Hart all steel motor with an output way
up there (I don't know the output figures as it was too long ago).
As to why the bracket was used, I guess it was standard practice among the guys
racing elans at that time (1970's-early 80's). the known problems of the early alloy
diff housings were more than likely the reason for the bracket being designed and
built as shown.
A rather clever modular design I would say, and not all that difficult to fabricate,
I'm glad it was left on the car.... pity I did not also grab the Hart engine as well the
quaife Diff.... oh well, ya can't win'em all I guess.
- ceejay
- Fourth Gear
- Posts: 558
- Joined: 27 Mar 2007
Interesting design for a bracket. I was thinking of the more standard bracket, but in some ways, this one feels easier to create, though more complicated.
Going sideways with the discussion, I wasn't aware of the upgraded diff case. Does anyone know when the switch was made, and any photos available of the uprated case? I'm guessing I've got an older style, but would be curious to understand the differences.
BTW, I did several searches but couldn't find anything on it. Another BTW, how do you old-timers on this board keep locating the old threads that newbies like myself can't find through the search? Computers for brains, I suspect?
Thanks in advance,
Dave
Going sideways with the discussion, I wasn't aware of the upgraded diff case. Does anyone know when the switch was made, and any photos available of the uprated case? I'm guessing I've got an older style, but would be curious to understand the differences.
BTW, I did several searches but couldn't find anything on it. Another BTW, how do you old-timers on this board keep locating the old threads that newbies like myself can't find through the search? Computers for brains, I suspect?
Thanks in advance,
Dave
Dave
'66 Elan S2 - 26/4378
'66 Elan S2 - 26/4378
-
bilcoh - Second Gear
- Posts: 136
- Joined: 10 Jul 2011
CeeJay;
Thanks for sharing. This would make a great test piece for a machinist apprentice to earn his papers!
Thanks for sharing. This would make a great test piece for a machinist apprentice to earn his papers!
Phil
1968 S4/SE FHC 36-7936
1968 S4/SE FHC 36-7936
- pamitchell
- Third Gear
- Posts: 269
- Joined: 11 Sep 2003
bilcoh wrote:Going sideways with the discussion, I wasn't aware of the upgraded diff case. Does anyone know when the switch was made, and any photos available of the uprated case? I'm guessing I've got an older style, but would be curious to understand the differences.
BTW, I did several searches but couldn't find anything on it. Another BTW, how do you old-timers on this board keep locating the old threads that newbies like myself can't find through the search? Computers for brains, I suspect?
Thanks in advance,
Dave
Dave,
Re: Cases. See elan-f14/elan-elan-diff-case-t23480.html
Re: Finding stuff - I guess it helps to know it's there, somewhere, before you start looking for it.
Cheers - Richard
- ardee_selby
- Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1090
- Joined: 30 Sep 2003
Richard wrote:
"Re: Finding stuff - I guess it helps to know it's there, somewhere, before you start looking for it."
Yes, or having just posted on this 3 days ago Also helps to know just what terms to search. I got really close with "diff alloy castings", and if I changed "castings" to "casing", I'd have found it.
Ah well, maybe I'll be that good when I'm a 5th gear poster as well.
Thanks again,
Dave
"Re: Finding stuff - I guess it helps to know it's there, somewhere, before you start looking for it."
Yes, or having just posted on this 3 days ago Also helps to know just what terms to search. I got really close with "diff alloy castings", and if I changed "castings" to "casing", I'd have found it.
Ah well, maybe I'll be that good when I'm a 5th gear poster as well.
Thanks again,
Dave
Dave
'66 Elan S2 - 26/4378
'66 Elan S2 - 26/4378
-
bilcoh - Second Gear
- Posts: 136
- Joined: 10 Jul 2011
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