Ride height limitations.

turboICE

New member
D.8.c. No part of the car, except for the exhaust system and suspension components, shall be lower than the lowest part of the wheel rims.

I read this to mean that chasis rails can not be lower than the lowest part of the wheel rims.

I had not made the connection that this could pose an additional limitation to the 5" ride height rule. I need to go back and measure mine as I could see this occuring while still meeting the 5" ride height rule. I had only checked ride height and made no measurements with regards to this rule previously.

Continually coming to realizations of what the rules mean to my car's preparation.
 
You have to be at 5" at the lowest point of the rocker panel, not including the seam. It doesn't matter if your rails are lower than the rockers, as long as they're not lower than the lowest point on the wheel.
 
You have to be at 5" at the lowest point of the rocker panel, not including the seam. It doesn't matter if your rails are lower than the rockers, as long as they're not lower than the lowest point on the wheel.
[/b]
This is where I am now. I never worried about my rails being lower than 5" as they are not the point of measurement. But until this week I hadn't thought about the rails in relation to the lowest point on the wheel.

The rule I quoted is a blanket for all car components including the rails, just hadn't made the connection.

I have two questions relating to it though.

What if over the course of their life the rails have been crushed up? (Seriously not a modification but a series of contact after contact over 8 years I am not sure any part of my rails are the same height they were originally.)

Ride height is without the driver, lowest point rule is silent, thoughts? My assumption is that the rule has a purpose on track as run (i.e. with driver) so that a cut tire doesn't turn the car into a sled.
 
This week I was measuring my ride height in preperation for next week and I happen to have a jacking point welded on the frame rails of my car. Is the 5' rule to this jack point or the racker/frame rail?
 
This week I was measuring my ride height in preperation for next week and I happen to have a jacking point welded on the frame rails of my car. Is the 5' rule to this jack point or the racker/frame rail?
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The ride height would be measured from the illegal jack point.
 
The ride height would be measured from the illegal jack point.
[/b]

Bill - Perhaps I was misleading. This is the stock jackpoint from the factory. All Honda/Acruas have plates welded to the frame rails to use for jack points
 
Bill - Perhaps I was misleading. This is the stock jackpoint from the factory. All Honda/Acruas have plates welded to the frame rails to use for jack points
[/b]


That's a different story. In that case, it would be measured from the legal, stock jack point. :birra:
 
That's a different story. In that case, it would be measured from the legal, stock jack point. :birra:
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not true

Minimum ride height is five (5) inches, to be measured
without driver at the lowest point of the rocker panel,
but not to include welded seams or fasteners.[/b]

Rocker Panel - The body panel closest to the ground extending along
either outer side of a car between the wheels.[/b]

Body Panel - A replaceable section of the body.[/b]

I don't think the frame rail or the jack point could possibly be considered a body panel.
 
Do you race on a billiard table? If your at the minimum for frame rails, you may have a tough time getting it on and off the trailer (or jacking it!).

Cheers.
 
I was wrong as well. the 5" is for the body. everthing else is the bottom of the wheel as mentioned. big advantage in running low profile tires.

dick
 
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