Chassis Frame and Body: Palak Desai Mechanical Engineering Department
Chassis Frame and Body: Palak Desai Mechanical Engineering Department
Chassis Frame and Body: Palak Desai Mechanical Engineering Department
Palak Desai
Mechanical Engineering Department
Introduction
Chassis is a French term and was initially used to
denote the frame parts or Basic Structure of the
vehicle.
It is the back bone of the vehicle.
A vehicle with out body is called Chassis.
1.Conventional frames
It has two long side members and 5 to 6 cross side members
joined together with the help of rivets and bolts
In this conventional frame construction the body and frame are
separated
In this the engine is at the front
Driver sits behind the engine
Frame sections may solid round or
rectangular cross section frames
2.Integral frame
Used in most of the cars
No frame and all the assembly units are attached to the body
Body will carry the entire function of the frame
Due to elimination of frame it is cheaper and due to less weight
of body it is most economic also
Frame Construction
C-shape
The C-rail has been used on nearly every type of vehicle at one time
or another. It's made by taking a flat piece of steel (usually ranging in
thickness from 1/8" to 3/16") and rolling both sides over to form a c-shaped
beam running the length of the vehicle.
Boxed
Boxed frames were made by welding two matching c-rails together to
form a rectangular tube. Modern techniques, however, use a process similar
to making c-rails in that a piece of steel is bent into four sides and then
welded where both ends meet.
Hat
Hat frames resemble a "U" and may be either right-side-up or
inverted with the open area facing down.
Types of frame
Ladder frame
Tubular space frame
Monocoque frame
Back bone frame
Ladder Frame
This is the earliest kind of chassis. nearly all cars in the world used
it as standard. Even in today, most SUVs still employ it. Its
construction, indicated by its name, looks like a ladder
Advantage:
It is easy and cheap for hand build.
Disadvantage:
Since it is a 2 dimensional structure,
torsional rigidity is very much lower than other
chassis, especially when dealing with vertical
load or bumps.
Who use it ?
Most SUVs, classic cars, Ford Crown
Victoria etc.
Tubular space frame chassis employs dozens of circularsection tubes position in different directions to provide
mechanical strength against forces from anywhere.
These tubes are welded together and forms a very
complex structure.
For higher strength required by high performance sports
cars, tubular space frame chassis usually incorporate a
strong structure
In the early 50s, Mercedes-Benz created a racing car
300SLR using tubular space frame.
Advantage:
Very strong in any direction. (compare with ladder
chassis and monocoque chassis of the same weight)
Disadvantage:
Very complex, costly and time consuming to be built.
Impossible for robotised production.
Besides, it engages a lot of space, raise the door sill and
result in difficult access to the cabin.
Who use it ?
All Ferrari , Lamborghini Diablo, Jaguar XJ220, etc.
Monocoque
Monocoque is a one-piece structure which defines the overall shape of the car.
While ladder, tubular space frame and backbone chassis provides only the stress
members and need to build the body around them, monoque chassis is already
incorporated with the body in a single piece, as you can see in the above picture
showing a Volvo V70.
In fact, the "one-piece" chassis is actually made by welding several pieces
together. The floorpan, which is the largest piece, and other pieces are pressmade by big stamping machines. They are spot welded together by robot arms
(some even use laser welding) in a stream production line.
The whole process just takes minutes. After that, some accessories like doors,
bonnet, boot lid, side panels and roof are added.
Monocoque chassis also benefit crash protection. Because it uses a lot of metal,
crumple zone can be built into the structure.
Another advantage is space efficiency. The whole structure is actually an outer
shell,
Although monocoque is suitable for mass production by robots, it is nearly
impossible for small-scale production.
The setup cost for the tooling is too expensive - big stamping machines and
expensive mouldings.
Advantage:
Cheap for mass production.
Inherently good crash protection.
Space efficient.
Disadvantage:
Impossible for small-volume
production.
Who use it ?
Nearly all mass production cars, all
current Porsche.
Backbone Chassis
Advantage:
-Strong enough for smaller sports cars.
-Easy to be made by hand thus cheap for lowvolume production.
-Simple structure benefit cost.
-The most space-saving other than monocoque chassis.
Disadvantage:
-Not strong enough for high-end sports cars.
-The backbone does not provide protection against side
impact or off-set crash.
-Cost ineffective for mass production.
Who use it ?
Lotus Esprit, Elan Mk II, TVR, Marcos.