I got to thinking (dangerous, I know) about how difficult it is to find parking spaces in many urban neighborhoods. A "Smart" Car could be really useful, but I just really don't want to be sitting in anything that small.
The issue is length. The 170" sedan fits in many places. The previous 160" car was even easier. An early A-body at almost 190" is not much different than a Volvo 240, which I've discovered requires a winning stroke of good luck in the game of Parking Lotto.
Sure, I suppose I could go find a 148" CRX if I wanted to. Or a 175" Volvo Amazon is a serious temptation. But none of those will hold a slant 6. As the brain started smoldering with curiosity, I stumbled upon
this old thread wherein lies a fascinating comment:
Quote:
If I had an extra 4 door A-Body, gas in the welder and extra time on my hands, I would section 30 inches or so out of the middle of the car and make a "short wheelbase" 2 door. (keeping the shorter 4 door, front doors)
Basically cut out the rear doors and back seat area and move the whole rear box forward.
Kinda gives you that circus
"clown car" look.
DD
Seriously? OK, I know some people can fabricate almost anything, and I admire them. But is this viable? Where would the various cuts be made, in such a way to keep the integrity of the unibody? I've read that the most important points (in the middle) are rockers, transmission tunnel, and roofline. If those were all cut at the same spot, wouldn't it be put together a little like a butt weld? Whereas if the tunnel was cut in the middle, rockers cut near the front, the roof cut near the back, (or vice-versa) would the pieces stack together sort of like building a brick wall, so the original strength of one piece overlaps the cut of the other?
I could imagine the shorter wheelbase adversely affecting handling and stability, especially given the "hang over" percentage of vehicle weight (past the tire contact points) being considerably higher... On the other hand, a Valiant/Dart trunk is big enough to carry the weekly groceries and still swallow half a Honda...
No structural degree, here. And I have just enough experience welding and painting to realize I'm not the guy to build this.

I much more enjoy the mechanics and electrics of a project.
Thoughts?
- Erik