2tonchevy wrote:
nitro_mudder wrote:
I know I am one of the few that do this, but for the money and reliability it is hard to beat a newer Water cooled motor for cheap power in a 2 seater. But an Air Cooled motor is lighter weight. An aluminum Ecotech motor puts out good power for less then 100 extra pounds. But this is a newer concept, not nearly as many as the VW motors in the woods. But I havnt talked to one person running a Watercooled motor that would switch back. Mainly because of the money. Just something to think about. I still feel your best bet is get a $3000 or so buggy to go learn on for a season then build or modify to suit your needs next winter. Hard to know what you want till you ride for a little while.
i had thought of using one of those type engines.....would one retain the VW transaxle and cv shafts etc....via an adapter plate? and would it be possible to mount the engine/trans facing either direction? (front or back) i like this idea, cheap and reliable!
Very good advice from Nitro. Get you a decent buggy and figure out what you like first before you drop maajor coin into anything.
You can still use the vw bus tranny n axles via an adapter plate with a w/c motor. You can mount a motor mid engine style, but it takes some work in the tranny, its not just a bolt-in deal. With mid engine or wc ( or both) you are getting into somewhat experimental territories, and it may take quite a bit of experimenting with suspension and/or gearing to get it to do what you saw going on on Saturday. Aircooled VW may seem more expensive when building, but there is little 'guess' work and there is a better chance you only got to buy parts once during your build (except for the shitty motor parts China has been sending us sometimes here lately

). If you go big cc a/c VW, be prepared to buy the best you can get from the get go and you will get many years reliable powerful service. If you go cheap at all anywhere in a performane a/c vw engine, you are asking for diasaster.
Not saying any one style buggy is any better than the other, it just comes down to if you wanna tinker with suspension (watercooled or midengine buggy) or the motor (aircooled buggy), and what you wanna do in it. Like Bruce said, you get a hold of Tim or any number of guys down around London, and they can steer you into a tried and true formula that works great for hillclimbing. Or go another route and you can "think out of the box" and try different things until you get it to hillclimb the way you want (maybe), but there will be fewer who can advise as to what it needs with a one-off combination.
Whichever way you go......Once bitten by the bug, you will be hooked!
