SC Flares or Rabbit flares revisited, Gary & Mike D. speak up pls. |
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SC Flares or Rabbit flares revisited, Gary & Mike D. speak up pls. |
airsix |
May 1 2003, 02:49 PM
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#1
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I have bees in my epiglotis Group: Members Posts: 2,196 Joined: 7-February 03 From: Kennewick Man (E. WA State) Member No.: 266 |
I like the look of SC flares on the 914. Brad says you don't get as much room for rubber as you might think. So, for you guys who've had this done, how much tire have you been able to fit under there?
About this great looking Rabbit flared 914.... Are there any pictures yet of it with appropriate wheels/tires? I'd really like to see how the final product looks. If I'm going to finish the body and paint on my car this spring/summer I've got to start making some decisions quick. Post away my friends. -Ben M. (welder in one hand and debit card in the other) |
airsix |
May 1 2003, 02:59 PM
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I have bees in my epiglotis Group: Members Posts: 2,196 Joined: 7-February 03 From: Kennewick Man (E. WA State) Member No.: 266 |
Forgot to mention that I am not a fan of the GT flares. (Sorry)
John Kelly's flared quarters are my favorite by far, but aren't avalable yet. Rabbit flares for $100 (questionable fit/appearance) SC flares for $400 (gotta get bumper extensions too) Bontempi quarters for $800 (but I don't really want fiberglass) Kelly flares for $800 (fabulous but not imediately available) What to do, what to do? -Ben M. |
Mueller |
May 1 2003, 03:19 PM
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#3
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914 Freak! Group: Members Posts: 17,146 Joined: 4-January 03 From: Antioch, CA Member No.: 87 Region Association: None |
Pull a Mueller and flare them yourself....
All you need is a sawzall, a hydralic jack and a welder (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smash.gif) Are looking at only doing the rears? I think the cars look best with matched flares, front and back. |
krk |
May 1 2003, 03:22 PM
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#4
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 997 Joined: 27-December 02 From: San Jose Member No.: 22 |
iirc, Dug (from the roadglue board) bought a 914/6 w/SC flares on it. Dunno what tires he runs, but he might be able to tell you more.
kim. |
Mueller |
May 1 2003, 03:30 PM
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#5
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914 Freak! Group: Members Posts: 17,146 Joined: 4-January 03 From: Antioch, CA Member No.: 87 Region Association: None |
I'm pretty sure Dug was running 245/50 or 245/45/16's in the rear on 8" rims when he had the BBS wheels.
The rear flares that he has had not been installed correctly or they used way too much 'glass on them. The fenders had to be 3/4" thick or thicker. He has now gone to different rims/tires and possibly has fixed the flares. |
airsix |
May 1 2003, 04:12 PM
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I have bees in my epiglotis Group: Members Posts: 2,196 Joined: 7-February 03 From: Kennewick Man (E. WA State) Member No.: 266 |
QUOTE(Mueller @ May 1 2003, 01:19 PM) Pull a Mueller and flare them yourself.... All you need is a sawzall, a hydralic jack and a welder (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smash.gif) Are looking at only doing the rears? I think the cars look best with matched flares, front and back. Hey Mike, you've got a short memory! Remember, I'm running 245's under Messinger flares. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/wink.gif) the grandady precursor to Stein flares. They did turn out fine, but I don't like the "bubble flare" style so much. Looking for something smoother. Here's a crappy pic. -Ben M. Attached image(s) |
Joseph Mills |
May 1 2003, 05:30 PM
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#7
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on a Sonoma diet now... Group: Members Posts: 1,482 Joined: 29-December 02 From: Oklahoma City, OK Member No.: 39 |
QUOTE(airsix @ May 1 2003, 02:49 PM) I like the look of SC flares on the 914. So, for you guys who've had this done, how much tire have you been able to fit under there? Ben, The PO of my car fitted 911 fender wells (I wouldn't call them flares), to my teener. They look exactly the same as my old 69' 911E. The lip of the fender is not "flared" as much as the later SC. I think I was running 8X16 Fuchs with yokohama 008s, 245/45. The fit was tight, but I never saw marks on them from autocrossing. However, on the street, hitting a severe dip in the road, they would "chirp". I'm now running 8X15 fuchs with Hoosier A3S03s, 225/45. Since Hoosiers are larger than others, it's still a tight fit. Just enough room to slide your finger between the tire and the fender opening. But the tire is inside the fender enough that it does not touch the fender when the travel is compressed. I would think an SC flare would provide even more room. If you're autocrossing, you might want to check and see if this modification is allowed in the class you want to run in. I'll try to post a pic. Attached image(s) |
John Kelly |
May 1 2003, 05:39 PM
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#8
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 692 Joined: 1-May 03 From: Moclips WA. Member No.: 640 |
I mentioned this on another post but... for those thinking about do-it-yourself flares, I'm working on a possible kit of tools and instructions with templates to make your own flares.
I've got a car lined up for the experiment to see what is possible, but the plan is to make flares similar to my weld-in flares that require lots of elbow grease but no welding. This would be accomplished by using a small hand held leather bag full of sand (shot dolly), and a mallet. You stretch the metal into the shot dolly raising many small stretched bumps. The next step is doing a little smoothing with a slapper and dolly, then use my shrinking disc (part of the kit) to heat and shrink the high spots closer to the ideal surface (see my drastic shrinking album). Do some more stretching with the mallet and shot bag, and repeat until you have the shape. I won't do the kit unless I think it is a fairly intuitive thing for the average do-it-yourselfer. I will document everything with lots of pictures. Making flares for 914s is slow going for me with my other work, so this is a way to get more people into flares without having to wait so long ( I'm about to start my 4th set) This method requires a lot of repetitive processes, and will be hard work, but I think the reward of building your own flares will make it worth it to some folks. The kit will include a shrinking disc, a shot dolly already filled with sand, and possibly a mallet, and slapper as well. Other tools needed would be a grinder for the shrinking disc (the higher the rpm and amperage the better) a couple of dollys, and maybe a body hammer, a bulls eye pick (see my shrinking disc album). Also with the kit would be steel templates to help with the shape, and pictures with text describing the the techniques used. I will be working on this for next few months, and then I will have an idea what is possible, and what the kit will cost. Here is the link to my albums: http://allshops.org/cgi-bin/community/comm...d=9990093068868 John www.ghiaspecialties.com |
porsche735 |
May 1 2003, 05:42 PM
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#9
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Member Group: Members Posts: 189 Joined: 10-January 03 From: Los Altos, CA Member No.: 127 |
Here is what we did...
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airsix |
May 1 2003, 05:42 PM
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I have bees in my epiglotis Group: Members Posts: 2,196 Joined: 7-February 03 From: Kennewick Man (E. WA State) Member No.: 266 |
Thanks for posting Joseph. I've seen the pictures of your car here before - very nice. I like it. Thanks for the info on tire sizes. That's exactly what I'm looking for.
-Ben M. |
porsche735 |
May 1 2003, 05:43 PM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 189 Joined: 10-January 03 From: Los Altos, CA Member No.: 127 |
Another view...
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porsche735 |
May 1 2003, 05:43 PM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 189 Joined: 10-January 03 From: Los Altos, CA Member No.: 127 |
The car on the track (numbers hadn't come in yet)...
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Zeke |
May 1 2003, 05:53 PM
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#13
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Never left, but not right.... Group: Members Posts: 381 Joined: 26-January 03 From: Long Beach CA Member No.: 197 Region Association: None |
As some may know, I used a method similar to the one described above in John's post. It is definately doable and fairly quick. It's some hard work, though. the benefit is that you decide the final shape.
Personally, I don't much care for the GT fenders either. Too boxy. I could live with a toned down version like taking the flares and cutting them down so they stuck out about half as much. But it's the high corners of each flare that needs to be softened, IMO. John's flares are very nice. John, maybe you don't need to roll out the whole fender from door to tailight. Your shape confined to the wheel arch area would be excellent. Sorta like an s curve that blends back in. Copy that? Joseph (735), I like that. |
krk |
May 1 2003, 06:14 PM
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#14
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 997 Joined: 27-December 02 From: San Jose Member No.: 22 |
I love John's stuff. Have enjoyed following it for some time (thanks to his posting progress pics at his site), and if I were doing a custom 914 (or ghia!), I'd be all over them.
Joseph, that car looks sweet. And it's yellow. With a black bumper. (for goofy reasons, I'm collecting pics of yellow 914's in general, and black bumpers as an interesting option) I've attached the last page of what I believe was porsche's homogolation papers for the 914. It shows some flare ideas I've not seen before. (I have to find the web reference to where I grabbed it -- the document is in german and french) Food for more thought. hth. kim. Attached thumbnail(s) |
Joseph Mills |
May 1 2003, 06:29 PM
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#15
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on a Sonoma diet now... Group: Members Posts: 1,482 Joined: 29-December 02 From: Oklahoma City, OK Member No.: 39 |
QUOTE(krk @ May 1 2003, 06:14 PM) Joseph, that car looks sweet. And it's yellow. With a black bumper. (for goofy reasons, I'm collecting pics of yellow 914's in general, and black bumpers as an interesting option) Thanks. It's not much of a concours candidate, but it's a great autocrosser. Like many cars, it looks better in a photo than it does in person. I've grown to really like chrome yellow. Some day it will be re-painted and it will either stay chrome yellow, or become silver. It's a '75 and I ditched the big (and to me, ugly), heavy 5mph bumpers for fiberglass ones (90lbs savings). They will get painted when the car does. If you have a site for all the yellow car pics, you oughta post it for everyone to see. |
krk |
May 1 2003, 06:38 PM
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#16
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 997 Joined: 27-December 02 From: San Jose Member No.: 22 |
QUOTE(joseph222 @ May 1 2003, 04:29 PM) QUOTE(krk @ May 1 2003, 06:14 PM) Joseph, that car looks sweet. And it's yellow. With a black bumper. (for goofy reasons, I'm collecting pics of yellow 914's in general, and black bumpers as an interesting option) Thanks. It's not much of a concours candidate, but it's a great autocrosser. Like many cars, it looks better in a photo than it does in person. I've grown to really like chrome yellow. Some day it will be re-painted and it will either stay chrome yellow, or become silver. It's a '75 and I ditched the big (and to me, ugly), heavy 5mph bumpers for fiberglass ones (90lbs savings). They will get painted when the car does. If you have a site for all the yellow car pics, you oughta post it for everyone to see. No worries on the concour front. It's the "first impression" sort of image I was looking for. I don't have that many pics -- it would be a bit of a lame website! Chrome yellow is definitely a great yellow. And what I was looking for was that first impression sort of pic that showed either a chrome or black, early style bumper. Not that many around! I do have a silver one -- and since I love silver porsches, it's a favorite. I posted pics of that one in another thread already.... but it does have a new front valence --- perhaps that's an excuse.... (IMG:style_emoticons/default/mueba.gif) kim. |
krk |
May 1 2003, 06:56 PM
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#17
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 997 Joined: 27-December 02 From: San Jose Member No.: 22 |
Oh, the captions for the photos:
Photo 7, part number 914 552 901 00 tableau de bord simplifie -- simplified dashboard Photo 8, part number 914 503 905/906 00 elargissement des ailes avant -- expansion of the "wings" before Photo 9, part number 914 503 907/908 00 elargissement des ailes arrier -- expansion of the "wings" after/behind (I'm guessing a bit on this one) (my french officially sucks badly -- wait till you see my German -- Andy will punt me from this board in a heartbeat) So drop into your local porsche dealer (or mayby PP :-) and order up some of these parts -- may get an interesting reaction :-) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/mueba.gif) kim. |
meursault |
May 1 2003, 08:57 PM
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#18
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Idjit Savant Group: Members Posts: 290 Joined: 26-February 03 From: San Diego, CA Member No.: 355 |
avant=before, front.
So, the translation should be "enlargement of the front fenders" and "enlargement of the rear fenders" --the pictures hold the clues. |
krk |
May 1 2003, 10:26 PM
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#19
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 997 Joined: 27-December 02 From: San Jose Member No.: 22 |
QUOTE(meursault @ May 1 2003, 06:57 PM) avant=before, front. So, the translation should be "enlargement of the front fenders" and "enlargement of the rear fenders" --the pictures hold the clues. meursalt, Hm. I think I pointed that out. See the caption for Pic 8 -- The avant part was pretty easy. Heck, even the internet translators get that one more or less right. "arrier" (with a circumflex accent (if I called that correctly) over the "e") is the part that I was less clear on. From context (and gosh darn it, I did peek at the pics), I knew it was the rear. But I didn't have a source for an accurate French translation. Hence the caveate. So "wings" is certainly wrong too - too literal -- most probably "fenders" as you point out -- ain't seen wings on a 914 for a while --- hmmm... hold it... that's the Monster Garage thread (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/mueba.gif) kim. |
krk |
May 1 2003, 10:46 PM
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#20
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 997 Joined: 27-December 02 From: San Jose Member No.: 22 |
Actually, here's a better move --- no need to depend on my crippled translations!
Here's the page of the doc I was decoding from. Attached thumbnail(s) |
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