After an internal debate about it I decided I'll be OK to post about this build. It's not my personal vehicle, but is being done for a friend of the shop I work for. I present the "Trackhoe" ( his name not mine I prefer Race Brick) a 96 I think Chevrolet Tahoe autocross/track day build.
Trying to pick a logical starting picture, and ended up with this instead. The engine for this is a 6.2 liter LS aluminum truck block and heads sent out and massaged with valve train trickery, forged rods and pistons, and some port work. Breaking it in with some half assed pulls on a Dyno without the supercharger it did 542hp and 497 foot pounds. We are shooting for 8000 RPM and somewhere acround 900 horsepower.
That's backed by a 7 speed BMW dual clutch transmission modified to handle the extra power and run on a stand alone computer. The engine and trans have been moved back in the chassis considerably, nearly a foot and everything has been squeezed vertically. The ride height will be 4 inches to the rockers, the custom tube frame bottoms a quarter inch above that, and the bottom of the transmission pan is a quarter inch above that.
A quick change independent center section is at the back. This one is just for mocking up and engineering there will be a shiny new one from Winters Performance in the final product. Pushrod actuated rear coil overs will be mounted inboard on either side of the quick change gear set and visible through the diffuser. The fuel tanks are being mounted flat in the center of the vehicle on either side of the drive shaft and exhaust tunnel.
The exhaust itself ended up being a trick, with the engine so far down and back finding room for the 180 degree cross over collectors meant bringing it forward and then packaging the pipes down the tunnel. All stainless as we weren't allowed the money for titanium here. We were allowed it for the intake side plumbing so from the pair of air boxes to the blower, the blower to the intercooler, and intercooler to the throttle body will be titanium.
More of the engine bay with exhaust and steering visible, the steering rack body is centered 2 inches in front of the front axle centerline. The leading edge of the balancer pulley is a half inch behind it, and the engine and trans are offset 3/4 inch to the right hand side.
The front suspension will be pull rod actuated with the coil overs mounted inline with the frame tubes pointed toward the front. Everything has been modeled with 5 inches of suspension travel, 37 degrees of steering (average), 2.5 inch scrub radii and camber gains of .8 degrees per inch front and .65 per inch rear.
Full size racing buckets from Racetech in both front spots, and it's getting vintage racing half buckets for the rear seats. The owner insists on being able to take his family to dinner in this.
Another requirement, 335/30-18 rubber at all four corners. Behind the wheels will be a full set of C6 Corvette carbon ceramic brakes, uprights will be built around C6 style Xtracker bearings. Haltech ECU to control the bulk of everything and incorporate traction control and intercooler sprayers and the 4 fuel pumps. The stand alone for the trans is from HTG and should interface directly with the Haltech.
It's going to be low, and the track widths have been stretched out to 78 inches front and rear. The filter boxes will feed through ducts at the back of the hood on either side and the radiator fans ducted out through the center of the hood. The thing should only be about 59 inches tall in the end despite being a full size SUV body. The hope is to reskin most of it with h carbon fiber to get the weight down and make the air jacks happy, the owner wants it to retain the look of a Tahoe though so other than some basic concessions we aren't allowed to go crazy with aero work.
That's pretty much up to date though. To answer the obvious though and end this post, "Why a Tahoe?". The answer I can give is that's just what he wanted, and our paty to getting the raciest Tahoe we can think of is to use the smallest amount of Tahoe we can get away with.