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Re: Step Pan

To: John Beckett <saltracer@servusa.com>
Subject: Re: Step Pan
From: "Thomas E. Bryant" <saltracer@awwwsome.com>
Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2005 07:52:34 -0700
John,

Is this for another car you are building? Your Honda has a belly pan and 
  I would think there would not be an issue with step pan design.

Page 42 in the 2005 rule book gives a description of the step pan. From 
what it says, I would assume that the front of the pan could be either 
at a right angle or at 45 degrees.

It would seem to me that the 10" would be at the nearest point.

The step pan cannot be lower than the bottom of the frame rail, but 
could be on top if you desire.

These rules are to keep a non-belly panned car from getting the effects 
of a belly pan by step pan design.

There are lots of tricks that help the underside of a vehicle, which in 
my opinion is more important that the top side. My '29 roadster was 
designed to have a very clean underside. The engine was mounted high. 
Even with a wet sump, the bottom of the oil pan was just below the 
bottom of the frame rail. I had the fuel tank mounted on a flat sheet of 
metal that was attached to the bottom of the frame rail in front of the 
engine. The step pan began at the firewall on the bottom of the frame 
rail and extended back to where the rear "Z" in the frame began. The 
rear axle was above the bottom of the frame rail. The only thing that I 
see in the rules that would have disqualified the '29 is the 45 degree 
bend at the rear of the pan and the fuel tank mounting.

How is your project coming along?

Tom, Redding CA - #216 D/CC

John Beckett wrote:
> 1) Where the step pan connects to the firewall does the connection have 
> to be a hard 90 degree bend or can there be a curve such as the original 
> floor boards?
> 
> 2) Where the rear of the pan comes up at a 45 degree angle do you 
> measure the 10" distance from the axle centerline at the closest point 
> to the bent pan or at the bottom where the bend begins?
> 
> 3) Does the step pan have to be on the bottom of the frame rails or can 
> it be mounted on top?
> 
> JB






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