There was never any question that the chassis of the 2005 Ford GT would not
resemble that of the 1960s-era original. A stamped-and-welded steel monocoque
may have been well ahead of the welded tube racing car spaceframes of the day,
but its nothing special today. Nor would carbon composites, with their
hand-labor and exotic curing regimen, be used because the build process is too
slow and expensive. There was only one realistic choice: aluminum extrusions,
a proven technology made popular by the Lotus Elise. Only the six-person chassis
teamlead by Huibert Mees of Fords Special Vehicle Teamwent
a few steps farther by including large aluminum castings, roll-bonded sheets,
and an exotic joining technology.
According to Mees, The more we thought about it, the more we realized
that it made sense to combine the extrusions with a casting at each corner in
order to make the attachment locations for the suspension extremely stiff and
accurate. (There is a fifth casting at the end of the passenger compartment
tunnel on the rear bulkhead. It ties this structure to the rear of the vehicle.)
Mees says the suspension attachment points are within +/- 0.75 mm, while the
tub is within +/- 1.0 mm diagonally. Not only does this enhance the cars
on-track performance, it also helps control road noise and impact harshness,
sinceunlike the original Ford GTthis version will spend most of
its time posing on Rodeo Drive than in pitched battle on the Mulsanne Straight
at Le Mans.
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may look like the original, but it certainly isn't built like it.
Aluminum is the material of choice for the 2005 Ford GT, in the form
of castings, extrusions, and sheet. But it's how the materials are utilized
that sets this car apart. Despite a tight timeframe, the chassis makes
use of adhesives, friction stir welding and roll bonding without adding
excess weight, sacrificing rigidity, or impairing repairability.
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The castings are sourced from Ramsden Industries, Ltd. (London, Ontario) and
Citation Corp. (Birmingham, Ala.), while Hydro Aluminum North America (Baltimore,
MD) provides the extrusions. The castings are A356 heat treated to T6,
and the extrusions are a combination of 6061 and 6063, also heat treated to
T6, says Mees. Where weight is more important than strength, the 6063
is used. In those areas that first must be bentlike the roof and rear
sport bar (roll hoop to non-lawyers)the material
is delivered in T4 form, then heat treated to T6 level after forming. The
nice thing about extrusions, says Mees, is that every wall can have
a different thickness. And in many casesthe rocker panels are but
one examplethey do. Three millimeters is about the limit if you
want repeatable, effective welds with no material burn-back, says Mees,
while 8 mm is the thickest section we use. Side crash forces are
fed through the rocker panels into the main structure, with support from the
extruded aluminum door beam that ties into the main structure through the hinge
and lock plates.
Milford Fabricating builds the chassis up in modules for Ford. The first station
assembles the front from the dash panel forward. The next handles everything
from the rear bulkhead to the rear bumper. Then these sections are joined together
along with the greenhouse, rocker boxes and some minor elements. Finally, there
is an off-line assembly station where the crossmember for the steering rack,
bumper assemblies, etc. are welded into place. The extrusions are robotically
cut to length, mounting holes are drilled, and these pieces are clamped into
fixtures before being robotically welded, says Mees. Seams that are inaccessible
to the robots are then welded by hand. Each welding station is designed
for a cycle time of one hour, says Mees, and the overall cycle time is
tied to a production rate of 1,500 GTs per year.
The floor section is made up of two 0.7-mm roll-bonded aluminum sheets. A thin
graphite pattern in laid on one sheet before they are pressed together between
high-pressure rollers. The effect is similar to hammer welding,
says Mees, because the two pieces are metallurgically bonded together
in those areas where there is no graphite. The graphite line includes
an area at the edge of the panel through which air is injected at high pressure.
This inflates the graphite-covered pockets to create voids. As a result, the
weight of the panel is equivalent to that of two 0.7-mm aluminum sheets, but
its strength is much greater. Tower Automotive provides this technology,
and they are able to inflate those panels up to 5.0-mm apart. And by getting
creative with the graphite layer, he continues, they also were able
to emboss the letters GT in the floor. The floor panels are
then glued in place, and riveted to prevent peeling under high loads.
Another Tower Automotive technology is used to bond the center tunnel to the
extrusions running down the center of the car. The U-shaped aluminum sheet that
forms the tunnel top and sides is placed atop the extrusions, then friction
stir-welded. A small mandrelabout an inch in diameter and sporting a nub
no larger than ½-in. on its lower faceis spun to 10,000 rpm, then
plunged through the clamped sheet and extrusion. The heat generated by the mandrel
causes the two materials to briefly reach their melting temperature and combine.
This introduces heat in a confined area and creates a homogenous sealed seam.
We considered gluing the pieces together, says Mees, but felt
this was a better choice, especially since the tunnel houses the fuel tank.
Front crash forces are fed through a specially designed removable structure.
Impacts up to 2.5 mph are taken by the foam located between the bumper beam
and fascias, and the beams are attached to extruded rails that extend to the
castings. Once the foam is crushed, the beam becomes the next sacrificial element,
followed by the longitudinal rails that bolt to the castings. Structural
repairs after a low-speed impact are relatively simple, says Mees. You
just unbolt the old, damaged structure and bolt on a new one. How repairs
of a more catastrophic nature will be handled in the field is still being determined.
Unlike every other Ford, engine decking is from the top. This allowed Mees
and his team to keep the greatest amount of structure possible beneath the massive
5.4-liter V8 and Ricardo-designed gearbox, while reducing to a minimum the superstructure
necessary to attach the powertrain to the chassis. Four extruded tubes
go across the top of the engine, he states, and theyre easily
unbolted in case theres a need for major service.
The completed chassis is loaded into a giant CNC set-up that has a gantry arm
with a 12-foot span. A majority of locating holesincluding those for the
superformed aluminum body panelsare cut into the structure at this point,
and accuracy approaches 0.0001-in. Not only does this give the greatest
control over the suspension mounting points, says Mees. it also
guarantees exceptional panel fit. The bow tie roof panel (so
named for the shape created by the door cutouts in the roof) is glued into place,
while the fenders and doors are bolted to the main structure. The chassis
becomes a giant fixture, he says, which controls the relationship
between the sections of bodywork. When complete, the chassis weighs just
205 kg. and reportedly has bending and torsion numbers well above 10,000 lb-ft/degree.
(Ford has not released the official figures.) Not bad for a chassis design that
went from concept to prototype in a little over seven months.