I was under the impression that it was forbidden to do anything like this to a chassis.
No drilling holes to fit things and as the last poster said the problems with heat build up torsional tensions etc could cause problems.
Have an accident because something you did caused it and you could be in a heap of trouble. What ever is done really needs an engineers certificate to say it is good.
Regards
Mike


 
						
					 
					
					 
				
				
				
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 a good stress concentration to get a start in life. Where you are considering welding, is the chassis member in tension (pulling forces), compression forces, fully reversing (both), torsion, bending, shear, the whole lot probably. Try not to weld it, have a good look at utilising existing attachments and bolt holes. Drilling holes is preferable to welding, but again, they need to be in the right place and suitable corrosion protection applied, rust never sleeps. (not my line it's from a movie
 a good stress concentration to get a start in life. Where you are considering welding, is the chassis member in tension (pulling forces), compression forces, fully reversing (both), torsion, bending, shear, the whole lot probably. Try not to weld it, have a good look at utilising existing attachments and bolt holes. Drilling holes is preferable to welding, but again, they need to be in the right place and suitable corrosion protection applied, rust never sleeps. (not my line it's from a movie  )
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