I broke a drive shaft on my 50 year old Hawke Formula Ford today. What would be a specification of steel that should be used in a new shaft?
I broke a drive shaft on my 50 year old Hawke Formula Ford today. What would be a specification of steel that should be used in a new shaft?
Give Hardi spicer in Moorebank a call Monday, they will sort you out. They have upgraded, straightened and balanced many drive shafts for me over the years.I would lose the Chrome.
https://www.hardyspicer.com.au/?gcli...SAAEgIkU_D_BwE
Last edited by Raleigh; 04.16.23 at 10:07 PM.
any time you electroplate a stressed race car part it should go through a hydrogen bake-out. If you specify mil-spec plating it's part of the process.
CDS (Cold Drawn Steel) is what you need. Hawke had a different way with the donut tripod thingy where they bored out the flange for the tube. Lotus etc machined down a stub to insert inside the driveshaft. They done the same on the Elan half shafts.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BujkB4tFQxc/
That's how I've made mine in the past.
Driveline Services Brunker. Road?
QUOTE=Hawke;651441]Sadly, Hardi Spicer could not supply the three pronged end. Said they were no longer available. However, a nice man at Bankstown has them on the shelf, and will make them next week.[/QUOTE]
You can nickel plate this with no ill-effects, if you are after a clean and shiny look. You'll need to autosol them once in a while...
cheers,
bt
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