Project Meetle is officially underway!

Submitted by Dan on Tue, 11/13/2018 - 15:33

After my exploritory blog posts, Project Meetle (Beetle+Miata) is fully under way! This is going to be a HUGE project that, if I work fast enough, will be driveable in half a year at least. I'm not an expert welder or fabricator by any stretch of the imagination. But I'm good a learning quickly, my confidence is high, I have most of the tools needed ( I think), and - most importantly - I have my wife's blessing. I expect this project to last at least 6 months, if I work really quickly, but will probably take closer to a year, and that's OK with me. I'm not going to engineer a whole new car, I'm not going to fabricate complex components or anything. It's crazy, it's ambitions, but I think I can do it!

I've broken down the project into stages, with the idea that at the end of each stage I have a vehicle that is running and driveable.

1. driveable miata with stretched wheelbase

  • driveshaft
  • fuel lines
  • brake lines
  • battery cable
  • PPF
  • floorpan
  • "frame rails"

2. miata with beetle body

  • rocker panels
  • braces
  • sheet metal
  • etc

3. driveable meetle

  • radiator
  • steering
  • seats
  • clutch linkage (?)

4. daily driveable meetle

  • dashboard
  • muffler
  • AC
  • heat
  • wiring

5. awesome daily driveable meetle

  • wheels and tires
  • paint job
  • accessories

I didn't waste time at all and started prepairing to cut the Miata in half. 

My next steps:

  1. Drain the gas and brake fluid
  2. Cut/disconnect/remove the exhaust, driveshaft, brake lines, gas lines, rear wiring harness, emergency brake cable, and battery cable
  3. With the front of the car up on jack stands and leveled, put the rear tires on two level tracks that the wheels can roll down 6"
  4. Support the transmission with a jack stand and then cut the PPF in half while it's still attached to the car.
  5. Cut out the old "frame rails" under the floorpan
  6. Drill out the spot welds in the rear seam of the floorpan
  7. Sever the door sills. The car will now be in two pieces
  8. Get both halves of the vehicle perfectly aligned 6" apart, and then tack weld it solid at the door sills and tack weld some support bars to keep it stiff
  9. Weld on new frame rails under the floorpan connected the front and rear subframes with 2x4 steel, effectively making it a framed vehicle. 
  10. Stitch weld in new sheetmetal in the floorpan gap
  11. Measure the distance from the transmission to the yoke on the diff. Take the driveshaft to the truck machine shop with this measurement. Pay $200?
  12. Bolt a steel extension for the PPF, and also add some crossmembers that secure the PPF to the new steel frame
  13. use a flanging tool on the brake and gas lines and slip on some rubber hoses
  14. put everything back together
  15. take it for a test drive

Coming soon: How To Cut a Car In Half, Part 1