I have a 13-year-old son who has been bugging me for something motorized for a while now (go kart, dirt bike, etc). Naturally, I'd like to feed this interest in mechanical things, if nothing else because it'll get him off the damn Playstation for a while. I also have a Father-in-law who is a retired machinist with 40+ years of experience and a full machine shop in his garage. I mean full, multiple lathes, CNC milling machine, several welders, tubing benders, etc etc. The FIL has offered to help the boy and I build a go kart. Needless to say, he's all for it. I am, too, though I'm not exactly swimming in free time, it would be great grandfather-father-son bonding, and he'd learn a ton. Heck, I might even pick up a thing or two!
Now, I'm fully aware that the better/cheaper/faster way would be to either buy a fixer-upper kart on Craigslist or get a kit, but since the building is half the point with this, we are going to start from scratch. As I said, he has all the tools and expertise we could ever need and access to metal suppliers and such. I have 20+ years of CAD experience and access to high-end software (Siemens NX). I have considered buying a set of plans and building from those. Here are a couple of places that have them:
http://www.kartbuilding.net/ http://www.spidercarts.com/alt/index.html
But, looking at them, they seem pretty simple, and I'm not sure it's worth it. Let's face it, there's not a lot to these things. Any parts we couldn't make we could easily source from one of these places:
http://www.mfgsupply.com/gomini.html http://www.gokartsupply.com/partcat.htm
The plan is to build a simple kart with a lawnmower-type engine, no suspension. We'll put some knobby tires on it so he can rip around our backyard and other large field-type areas.
So, any tips? Anybody done this before and has advice? Are the plans worth buying? Any other online resources I should know about?