I've read some past forum threads on DIY composite chassis and aluminum monocoque chassis here that unfortunately fizzled out. I would like to at least rekindle the conversation...
I've been interested in kit cars for at least as long as I've been interested in exotic cars, which is to say practically since my recall memory began. I distinctly remember watching Group B races on late night TV when my babysitter was watching me...yet I can't remember her face or name, or anything else I may have done that day...but there, basking in the blue-glow of that old tube TV, I remember being enthralled by these machines.
At first kit cars were this kid's dream as how to acquire an exotic car for hot rod/junkyard prices (ah, how simple ideas like this can infect a mind...), then dawned a realization that a kit car could be a platform for something equal to, not just a low-rent knock-off of, an exotic car. After owning a few exotic cars, my goal quickly became to build something BETTER than, superior to, those poster cars.
As time passed, experience grew, and my own tastes emerged, I realized I wouldn't be satisfied with owning a knock-off, no matter how much better it performed or how much more affordable to own or how much more reliable I could make it. I started suffering the hubris of making my own car!
And so after I built a few component/kit cars of my own, that bitter taste of disappointment from (kit car) engineering flaws, repurposing OEM equipment without understanding the impact of geometry during dynamic vs. static demands, financial constraints and just sheer laziness on the part of the manufacturer, led me to fantasize once again about building my own car. I'd do it right, if only!
There is a coherent point to all of this rambling, I promise.
Everyone oohs and ahhs over the supercar/hypercar carbon fiber tubs from the like of the Ferrari F50, Porsche Carerra GT, McLaren F1, the alphabet soup McLaren cars, Koenigsegg, Pagani, (did I leave any out?) etc. But did you know there were much smaller manufacturers that used composite tubs/monocoques too?
The Murtaya seems to be known by at least a few members here, as I found a thread regarding them. Fiberglass monocoque shell, Subaru AWD powertrain. Looks kinda like the BMW M coupe (clown shoe).
Then there is the Davrian/Darrian, the GTM Libra, various Marcos and a Caterham. All of these were made in England...makes sense, between their national infatuation with kit cars and aerospace/racing pedigree.
Over here, this side of the pond, we have fewer examples, but one notable manufacturer: Consulier/Mosler. I know we have at least one member who has a Consulier GTP.
I'm not suggesting that it's as easy as slapping some resin and cloth together in a shed...but what if it's not much more complicated than repairing/rebuilding/designing a boat? There are several forums (forii?) that cater to building composite boats, from kayaks to mega-yachts, and many channels on YouTube of guys in their back yards rebuilding fiberglass boats, again from kayaks to yachts.
I was a voracious consumer of enthusiast/niche print magazines when those were still a thing. In fact, until the advent of the internet, it was often the only means one had of seeing what was going on in an industry/hobby elsewhere. Besides GRM, I discovered the British kit car magazines, racing magazines, kitplane magazines and boating magazines. An idea had gelled in my head in the early 2000's...what if a guy could build a car like a boat or kitplane?
Besides not knowing anything about boats, planes or composites, the idea of an "affordable" exotic chassis kept sticking in my craw. Discovering the Davrian/Darrian and later the Consulier GTP/Intruder/Raptor then the Mosler MT900, further whetted my appetite. Not much info was out there, but then the power of the internet started to allow enthusiasts and experts to cross paths, sharing info, ideas and build techniques.
Finally, 25 years after my first inklings of a DIY monocoque composite chassis, I'm prepared to attempt what I once thought was an impossibility...building my own.