Thanks Mike. Yep, we made the same comment as we were coming back (Dan was riding shotgun) He said " Pretty amazing to think that this was something that a year ago we were welding up the frame for, and now it's running down the road." It is satisfying, and it is also cool that people received it so well. I got comments ranging from "cute" to "bet that's fun to drive" , and everything in between. Makes all the sweat and bandaids worthwhile. :D
FMX, you could take an existing frame and cut it up I guess, but it is just as easy to start from scratch IMO. I know it seems logical that you can just cut off the back and add whatever steel you need to get it down lower, and that can of course be done, but you would be better off just building one out of new tubing. Probably cheaper too.
As for the lowness in front, a T bucket type suicide front end will get you down, but to get it really low I had to go beyond that. I mounted my spring shackles on the lowest point on the car, the gussets on the wishbones. By doing that I was able to lower it more than the normal mounting point that they use on the batwings.
One thing that surprised me the most since I have started driving it is that I don't really have to baby it over speedbumps and coming out of driveways. I have seen lowriders creep sideways very slowly when entering parking lots and stuff like that, and I thought I would have to be careful too. But I am able to drive it like a regular car and it hasn't bottomed out yet. I guess the short wheelbase and the fact that the low suspension parts rise with the tires gives it enough clearance under those circumstances. I ran into some really horrible road conditions around Orlando where it was hard to avoid very rough pavement and bumps, and it was never a problem even at highway speeds.
I'm reposting a couple of pictures for you to see how the bare frame looked, and also some of the front suspension. Maybe these will explain better what you would need to do to get it down as low as you would like. BTW, sounds like you are getting some good parts together. Take my word for it though, go with the automatic. Even two pedals were tough to fit in there........three would have been impossible.
Don