NHRA

S&W Race Cars Continue To Add To Their 2,800 Roll Cage Kits

S&W Race Cars Continue To Add To Their 2,800 Roll Cage Kits

Many consider sanction-mandated roll cage construction as a tedious chore, until one day when it may save your bacon. On that possible day something causes you and your car to tangle with anything from the guardwall to a dreaded “roof ride,” that cage will immediately become your best friend.

To say that S&W Race Cars are experts at developing and selling pre-engineered roll cage kits is an understatement. With over 2,800 kits available for your specific body style, we talked to the team there as they developed yet another cage kit to offer.

John Burke, an engineer at S&W explains, “When we can get a car into the shop to develop a new kit, we go through a very stringent measuring process. Even if we don’t offer a cage kit yet for your body style, we have a custom measurement form that customers can complete for a custom cage.

S&W’s John Burke uses an exact set of tools to perform the measuring and development of a new roll cage kit for a new body style.

Burk describes the measuring process as being very involved. An S&W cage design achieves a proper fit and allows the customer to easily install through the door openings or within the rear deck area into the trunk.

S&W offers weld-in cage kit choices from four-point street bars, eight-point roll bars, to 10-point roll cages. Each design has its place, depending on the racing sanction rules related to the speed of your car. S&W offers cage conversion kits that expand an eight-point roll bar set into a 10-point cage, if you have stepped up your game. You can even add a funny car driver’s surround with your existing cage with an S&W kit.

The only way an actual cage kit is added to our part numbers is if we do our own measuring process. We do not rely on customers’ measurement to create a mass-produced cage kit. – John Burke

“When looking for the optimum places to mount the cage onto the floor pan, it is very involved to find the best access and strongest mounting points,” Burke adds. “We don’t want to rip the carpet out to measure the floor pan, but if you take a concentrated look under the car, you can develop the flattest area for mounting roll cage floor plates.”

Burke will analyze how the rocker box is formed and how it mates to the floor. Cage pads will either sit on top of the rocker box or just inside on top of the floor pan. He explains that most of the time, it’s going to sit on the floor pan just inside the rocker box to clear a vehicle’s doors when closed.

“We…

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