Strop wrote:Wheels under nice aerodynamic guards outside that width should cause minimal drag - I hope anyway.
They help allot, and it isn't to hard to design them in from the beginning. They can be quite simple if they are just flat plates bolted on. A set of nuts can be built into a frame that borders the wheel well. Then a set of short bolts or domed head machine screws can be used to hold the cover in place. Press in captive nuts can be used for the machine screws to be screwed into, both in stainless steel so they don't corrode. Alternatively regular nuts can be welded onto the frame, but only if the metals match.
Captive nuts at McMaster-Carr:
http://www.mcmaster.com/#press-in-captive-nuts/=mwal2y Hum, I notice they have nylon insert ones, but I wish they came in 1/4". For captive nuts you drill an undersized hole of the right size for the captive nut where you want it to be. Then you press the captive nut into that undersized hole using a press, and the deforming of the metal holds it in place and keeps it from turning.
Also I'm thinking of modifying my wheels to have two or three valve stems to make it easier to check the tire air pressure with the covers on. It's a mod I've decided will be done when my rear tractor tires are replaced in a year or two.
Strop wrote:It is my hope to pull a teardrop behind a VERY aerodynamic car (when I get the car back together).
The size of TTT I want likely will make that impossible, but I still look at the possibility every now and then. A recent conversation on another board revived the interest in getting a Porsche 550 Spyder kit car. Low and very sleek.

Being so low, small and sleek they don't even have room for two suitcases...

I'd need a trailer to take anything with me on a trip.