well it has been quite a while, Covid has nearly destroid us twice financially and came with in a nats whisker of having to sell alot of stuff we would not want too.
that asides we are all well and healthy baring shoulders and shingles lol.
All of that is not why you are here, Pretty Ugly has sat there for quite a while gathering cobwebs :-( and looking unloved but we have now had a little time away work to do some more on her.
1st up was lots of graphity on the chassis marking out where the frame and hab box etc needed to go along with exact points for the pivot and fixed points.
then I finished making up the moc sub frame pivot points and outer rail.
This was to allow me to get within the ball park for the longatudinal line the pivot points will follow and also to give me an idea where the Floor of the habitat box will go whilst being pivoted
and with the rails
one this was done and both the pivot points had been drilled at dead center of the chassis I cleard out an access path to the rear of the truck and used the forklift to lift the rear left wheel to simulate the torsional twist
Slowly all the way to 530mm with both pivots in the middle point.
It all looked good at this point and we thought we had nailed it 1st try to we dropped the truck back down to the ground and removed the rear pivot pin and lifted the truck again to see if there would be any change...
In the above image once we took the pivot pin out as you can see the hole was 25mm out of line which would most definitely end in breakages.
with the above photo we needed to drop the rear pivot by 12 holes (the whole that intersected the center line of the back plate) which ment the pivot was going to be below the bottom of the chassis. after a little head scratching we decided to lift the middle pivot point by 6 holes and drop the rear point by 6 holes and start again see =ing how close this would get us to the longitudinal pivot line.
all was going well untill there was a massive pop and twang, so I jumped off the forklift and checked everything over which turned out to be one the the spot welds on the rear right corner letting go. I scratched my head again and looked about untill I had one of those DUH moments yes I had dropped the rear hole by 6 holes drilled it and put a new pin in but in my hast I had forgotten to remove the original pin lol 2 pins led to a fixed rear pivot point and an exploding spot weld. well the system works as if it dont pivot right even when only 200mm lifted at the rear wheel it pops welds. anyhow I removed the extra pin and re-welded the busted spot.
The end result after multiple lift and drops is a longitudinal line that is near enough there to give me a starting point to weld up the frame and be close enough to fine tune the height of the pivots
The last few lifts were just Over 600mm high from the right side center ( left tyre )of the bottom of the rubber wheel from the ground.
this still left alot of space (failed to measure it but visually looked like 40mm or so)before the subframe would interfere with the top of the chassis rail.