I do too. What make is that one? It accommodates the rear trans I see. I can just tell that that's gonna be outta my snack bracket. I'm going to stick with my conventional eng/trans for a while yet. I suppose it's much more rigid. Perimeter welding that stainless frame for rigidity would help a lot.
http://www.phillymotorsports.com/C5_Chassis.htm
here it is. The shop I am working for is building the one I posted. It is the first frame done and we have the second one at the shop too. A third one should be ordered in a few months after this one is done. I don't want to give out details on the car until I know it is OK with shop owner. I will say building the car hasn't been too bad, but the little details are a pain in the arse..
Keep at it for a few years, develop some skills and connections, and then go out on your own. It seems to be becoming a growing industry with us 'boomers'.
The question I would ask about the Rowley frame is if they narrow the rearend to allow the use of 4 inch back space 17x8 inch wheels instead of the severe offset factory Corvette wheels shown? Paul Newman and several of the other guys who are making aftermarket frames for Corvettes all use 84-87 rear suspension because it is narrower than 89-96 rearends with have better geometry, brakes and availability.
The only company making a truly BOLT IN frame with complete C4 suspension that requires no modification to the original Corvette body is the Street Shop Inc out of Athens Ala. You can actually roll the original frame out from under a 63-67 Corvette and roll their mandrel bent, rectangular tubing manufactured frame that looks very similiar to an original Corvette frame with complete C4 suspension under the car and bolt it down with no body modification at all to your original body! The Street Shop uses coilovers at all 4 corners and narrows your 89-96 C4 Corvette rearend as part of a frame purchase. Rick Hendricks of Hendricks Motorsports has 2 Corvettes with this chassis.
With this chassis you can run 17x8 inch wheels with a 4 inch backspace that fit under the stock fenders/quarter panels instead of the severe offset factory Corvette Wheels needed for the frames pictured above.
Something else to consider.
__________________
Mike
Remember "Drive Fast, Turn Heads, Break Hearts"
Last edited by vintageracer; 10-10-2006 at 09:35 PM.