I've used alumalite on cars in the past. Some last longer than others. Haven't had the car up on a lift yet to see how flat it is on the bottom. Used to use caulking on the ends and run an old window seal around the edge to finish it off a bit. But the supra almost seems a little too nice to be using it on it. Maybe I'm just over thinking it.Make is not everyone's cup of tea.
In the past I made basic fiberglass car parts for myself. Really depends on how abled you are in the end.. nowadays there's 3d resin and whatnot printing..
If you do a good job with it and paint/finish, no one would stop you...
Making something for your car always makes it feel more worth it in the end, so if you can do it well, i would say go for it and update us with pics!So been debating on just getting another sheet of alumalite and just making a front splitter. Anyone else used it on the supra?
These generic responses from this account are getting old.Making something for your car always makes it feel more worth it in the end, so if you can do it well, i would say go for it and update us with pics!
It's been a while since I bought a sheet but that still sounds pretty high. (Could be wrong)I would agree that we need to look at the underside of the car first. I started to make a plywood splitter for one of my other cars, turned out to be a lot more engineering involved and parts being made that I didn't have way to fabricate. Other people had done at successfully, but it always seemed that there was something on their bill that I couldn't do myself.
On the bright side, once you get one figured out, you just keep cranking them out after that.
I prefer plywood as it is the cheapest option, very strong, and doesn't weigh too much.
Alumalight is a really good way to go if you can afford it. I don't know where people are getting their sheets, my local sign place quoted me $250 for a 4x8 sheet. No thanks.
That’s a Supra with a home-made splitter turning in front of the dodge at the local meet.The supra is smaller than any car dodge has put out for the last 5 years...
Oh I'm well aware these are consumables. Lol thus the reason I just want to make it out of alumalite instead of just buying one. My thing is it's mainly a street car for me.Sounds like mounting points are easy enough. Get some birch plywood. If you have access to a splitter to trace, there ya go. If not, you can just measure out from your bumper cover to the length you need. We tend to use rivnuts, nuts, bolts, l-brackets, etc. Home Depot is your friend. Again, once you build one, the rest are cake.
There is a rubber edging with mounting points spaced out to that you can shape it around the car as an air dam.
The splitter and air dam are VERY reasonably priced. You won't win any car shows or get street cred, but it's the go-to for anyone who pays for their own consumables.
And yes: you WILL be going through multiple splitters.
If it's mainly a street car, why bother?Oh I'm well aware these are consumables. Lol thus the reason I just want to make it out of alumalite instead of just buying one. My thing is it's mainly a street car for me.