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Manx rollbar
Posted: Thu Apr 01, 2010 3:38 pm
by 73SpeedBuggy
I my manx rollbar arrived today and I'm really stumped on exactly where the "L" brackets it came with are supposed to go. does anyone have any pictures of one of these installed? Especially a picture of the "L" brackets mounted?
Manx rollbar
Posted: Thu Apr 01, 2010 4:00 pm
by 1856
The L bracket bolts the the shock tower using the slotted single hole and to through body using two bolt side and aligning with the two bolt flange welded to the role bar. Before you drill any holes measure the hoop height from the top of the roll bar to the body on each side and lay-out the project twice. It's not unusual if to find that L bracket is not a universal fit ...have fun.
Mark
Manx rollbar
Posted: Thu Apr 01, 2010 6:01 pm
by 73SpeedBuggy
OK, so the bracket is actually going OUTSIDE the tub and on the shock tower, not on the frame around the pan?
Manx rollbar
Posted: Thu Apr 01, 2010 8:43 pm
by MyBlueBuggy
Yes, it goes on the outside of the body.
Manx rollbar
Posted: Thu Apr 01, 2010 9:20 pm
by 73SpeedBuggy
I see now. I was extremely confused becaused my old rollbar went all the way to the floorpan. I didn't notice how much shorter this one was and thought it was supposed to do the same thing. Thanks for setting me straight.
Manx rollbar
Posted: Fri Apr 02, 2010 12:23 pm
by 1856
Adam, I did add a piece to the bottom of the bar so landed on the pan ...I found the tub depth on each side different on most our buggies ... so before drilling any holes stand back and look at the horizontal alignment with bar to the windshield frame.
Mark
Manx rollbar
Posted: Sun Apr 04, 2010 4:09 pm
by 5150bossman
We all love a good 'oldschool' buggy. But you should really consider going to a full cage as soon as possible. The single hoop has a tendancy to fold over if you roll over at any kind of speed. We lost a good friend in a buggy roll over a couple of years back. Here is a pic of another roll over that dramatically illistrates what could happen. Yes, we ran a single hoop for years, but after our friend's death, put the cage on the top of our priority list (Mel is STILL waiting for her new expresso machine
. I just tell her to look at the new roll cage and pretend.....).
Manx rollbar
Posted: Sun Apr 04, 2010 5:16 pm
by 73SpeedBuggy
Thanks.. I wish someone made a pre-fab cage ready to go. I don't have the skills, tools or resources to make one and don't know where I could get one made.
We all love a good 'oldschool' buggy. But you should really consider going to a full cage as soon as possible. The single hoop has a tendancy to fold over if you roll over at any kind of speed. We lost a good friend in a buggy roll over a couple of years back. Here is a pic of another roll over that dramatically illistrates what could happen. Yes, we ran a single hoop for years, but after our friend's death, put the cage on the top of our priority list (Mel is STILL waiting for her new expresso machine
. I just tell her to look at the new roll cage and pretend.....).
Manx rollbar
Posted: Mon Apr 05, 2010 4:24 pm
by dan-b
Mike, That picture scares the cr*p out of me about running a single bar setup. I'm still in the rebuilding stage of putting my clone back together, but a full cage has gone to the front of my to do list. OUCH!!!!! But thanks for sharing. Safety first!
Dan
Manx rollbar
Posted: Wed Apr 07, 2010 4:18 pm
by 5150bossman
We ran a single hoop for years without issue. But every once in a while, we would get ourselves into trouble on a run and the thought of the single hoop in that pic would race through my mind. Two seperate occassions stand out. One was a steering problem where we almost spun out doing 60 on a narrow road in Lone Pine, the other was a spin-out into an embankment in Nipton. Fortuneately, no roll over on either case. But it was enough to scare me. When our friend had his accident, that was the final straw, so the cage went in.
Manx rollbar
Posted: Wed Apr 07, 2010 10:24 pm
by 73SpeedBuggy
5150bossman wrote:We ran a single hoop for years without issue. But every once in a while, we would get ourselves into trouble on a run and the thought of the single hoop in that pic would race through my mind. Two seperate occassions stand out. One was a steering problem where we almost spun out doing 60 on a narrow road in Lone Pine, the other was a spin-out into an embankment in Nipton. Fortuneately, no roll over on either case. But it was enough to scare me. When our friend had his accident, that was the final straw, so the cage went in.
You fab it yourself?
Manx rollbar
Posted: Thu Apr 08, 2010 4:06 am
by Ed-Chenal
You don't need a Roll Cage unless you plan to roll your buggy....
He said facetiously.
Manx rollbar
Posted: Fri Apr 09, 2010 7:35 pm
by manxdavid
Here's a (borrowed) pic. if that helps...
Manx rollbar
Posted: Sat Apr 10, 2010 4:21 pm
by 5150bossman
No, Dale and I went to a guy in Simi who did them up for us.
Manx rollbar
Posted: Sun May 02, 2010 3:28 pm
by Gary1719
What is the size of the tubing used on the Manx roll bar from the club store?