• Hi Guest!
    You can help ensure that British Car Forum (BCF) continues to provide a great place to engage in the British car hobby! If you find BCF a beneficial community, please consider supporting our efforts with a subscription.

    There are some perks with a member upgrade!
    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Subscribers don't see this gawd-aweful banner
Tips
Tips

roll bar

kbash

Jedi Trainee
Offline
From a protection point on a uni body mgb, a roll bar would seem kind of pointless beside look's wise. Cuase in a chrash would it actually make a differnce. Sine it does not have a frame to give it support?
 
Theres a few types of rollbars available....most are just for looks, unless you get one of the approved racing rollbars that is a requirement in some motorsports.
I have two standard("looks") rollbars that I haven't installed yet(hopefully this summer)and I am looking for one more for the LE.
 
With a properly designed and installed roll bar, the unibody vs frame thing is a non-issue. It's all about the configuration and attachment. Most bars that would be of any real safety benefit would probably also be almost unusable on a street MGB. It would have to be too tall to allo the operation of the top. It would also have to be installed far enough back from the seatback to prevent your head from hitting it in a rear end collision. Proper bracing would take up interior space.

That's why the bars you see so often on BMWs, Miatas, etc. are called "Style Bars" and not "Roll Bars".
 
okay, well if i was goign to put one in for safty it would be a scca aproved one.
 
As far as I know the SCCA approved bars don't allow for top operation....a real problem here in Canada.
 
Yup, but in the end you really dont need a SCCA rollbar ublessyour racing it.
 
To be effective, a roll bar must be properly installed, with both diagonal and fore and aft bracing. On a unibody, it should be welded to some vertical member of the body, and the floor attachments should be adequately reinforced with backing plates top and bottom.
The commonly seen "style bars" can actually fold in a roll over, and more than likely will. I had a friend killed when she flipped her Jeep equipped with one of these, and it acted like a mouse trap on her neck.
If you want to install one, fine, that's up to you. BUT, just remember, it's there for cosmetics only, and don't let it lull you into a false sense of security.
Jeff
 
[ QUOTE ]
From a protection point on a unibody MGB, a roll bar would seem kind of pointless besides look's wise. In a crash would it actually make a difference, since it does not have a frame to give it support?

[/ QUOTE ]

Installed correctly with the correct materials and mounting - yes they do make a difference if you roll over. Unibody (MGB) won't make a bit of difference to help save someone in a rollover without a bar.
 
[ QUOTE ]
Installed correctly with the correct materials and mounting - yes they do make a difference if you roll over. Unibody (MGB) won't make a bit of difference to help save someone in a rollover without a bar.

[/ QUOTE ]

I'm curious...how can a roll bar that's the same height as your head (or lower) make any difference when you roll over? And that describes every roll bar out there that fits under a raised MG top....it looks good to come people. PERIOD!
 
If a person is so worried about rolling over in an MG that they put one of those 'sissy' bars on - they should be wearing a helmet as it will give more protection that the 'sissy' bar!

Oh, part of "installed correctly" is just that: 2" above your helmet!
 
Jeff...I've just ordered arm restraints and a window net for the GRM car....when it gets back on its wheels it gets a proper roll bar! 4-point w/harness bar & Paddy bar & NASCAR driver door bar...at least 2" above me sitting in the car wearing my helment.....oh & the bar will be padded everywhere I might come in contact with it....& my Kirkey racing seat will be secured to the roll bar also - that's properly mounted!
 
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Installed correctly with the correct materials and mounting - yes they do make a difference if you roll over. Unibody (MGB) won't make a bit of difference to help save someone in a rollover without a bar.

[/ QUOTE ]

I'm curious...how can a roll bar that's the same height as your head (or lower) make any difference when you roll over? And that describes every roll bar out there that fits under a raised MG top....it looks good to come people. PERIOD!

[/ QUOTE ]

As I said - if installed correctly which implies correct height, (if it is too low that that would not be installed correctly), if correct material, which implies it is not a piece for only looks, if fastened correctly which implies it is bolted or welded at as many points as necessary.

Whether a top fits or not has nothing to do with if a rollbar is correct.
 
Bruce - I bow towards your home state & ask forgiveness for doubting that you were also trying to set others straight...
 
First thing I did when I got my Midget home was to take off the roll bar. Not only didn't I like the look of the thing, my daughter who sits behind/between the seats would head butt the top bar in a front collision and I or my wife would have BIG dents in the back of our heads in case of a rear collision.
I'm sure there's been cases when 'style bars' have saved lives, but surely more often the other way around.
 
Tony, this sounds very close to what I have installed, except for the window net. (All mine are open cars.) And, I have Nascar bars on both sides.

Are you using the padding with the offset hole, putting more foam at the possible contact points?
What are you going to run for belts?
Jeff
 
We’ve been down this road a number of times and I think we’ll never see the end of this debate. But not wishing to be left out, here are my thoughts again.

Honestly I don’t consider my rollbar anything more than what it is – a sporty cosmetic addition. But as I’ve said before I do feel that is stiffened up my B (laterally speaking) significantly with the addition of the rollbar. Again not a reason for everyone to rush out & purchase one – as I believe that some folks actually like a little body roll and the same thing could probably be accomplished through other means.

That said – I’ll admit that I have driven my B pretty hard and because of the low center of gravity I can truthfully say that I’ve never felt as if she was going to flip on me. Now if I was in competition with others cars all around me, bumping & tapping each other as we entered & exited a turn – I’m pretty sure the risk of a roll over would be much more likely. Thus the need for a more substantial roll bar.

My $0.02 (again) /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/wink.gif
 
Jeff...I've got 5-point racing harness from SafEquip...& I've not gotten the padding yet so I'm not sure

Brett...discussing this subject is kinda like asking "what color should I paint my MG?"
 
Tony, there is dedicated roll bar padding that has much thicker foam on one side. Makes it kinder on the noggin if you bump your head.
A minor point you may want to consider is to pad anything under the dash that your legs or knees may hit. After my violent excursion in the Bugeye, the only damage to me was a bruise on one knee where it hit the steering column support. The bad part was that padding it was on my "things to do" checklist, and somehow got missed. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/blush.gif
I've tightened up my checklist procedures since then. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
Jeff
 
Back
Top